The Allotment and Seed Information Centre

 

companion planting & garden vegetable

Our top 3 tips on how to select and grow for maximum results

Whether you are a professional horticulturalist, an enthusiastic allotment gardener or simply want your vegetable garden to look it's best then there are 6 key items you will need to concentrate on:

1. Buy Fresh Seeds

When selecting seeds, many of us will consider things like colours and scent as key determining factors when it comes to flowers and plants and the kinds of things we like to eat when choosing which fruit and vegetables we wish to grow. However, whilst these things should play a part in our choices, they simply constitute just a small part of the overall picture in how we should make our choices and there are so many other things to consider too

For best germination purchase new seed every year.

  • Depending on the vegetable crop, leftover seed can be difficult to store and often germinates poorly.

  • Saving seed from previous harvests can be risky, too.

  • It is safer to buy fresh seed from a reliable company.

One problem with saving seed from last year’s crop is the possibility of getting plants that are not true to type.

Off-type plants are produced because many vegetables are hybrids or easily cross-pollinate in the garden. While these off-type plants may be interesting, some-times they produce poor quality crops. In addition, diseases can be transmitted through the seed. Seed companies select disease-free plants for their seed. Many seed producers also treat their seeds before offering them for sale. This chemical treatment   kills disease organisms in or on the seed. It also prevents seed rot and “damping off,” a disease that causes rotting in young seedlings.

2. Prepare the soil well

Planting a garden involves more than putting seeds in the ground.

  1. Preparing the seedbed, selecting seeds, and

  2. deciding when to plant come first.

  3. Will you sow seeds—and then thin them—or will you try trans-planting?

This decision, among others, is up to the individual gardener.

Before planting any seeds prepare the soil. This includes cultivating properly, adding organic matter, and maintaining soil fertility. Early autumn is the best time to begin preparing the soil. Remove sticks, stones, and other debris. Also remove plant debris that may harbour insects and diseases. Pest-free plant debris can be tilled into the soil. A level site can be dug over in the autumn without danger of soil erosion. The freezing and thawing action in the spring will break up the clods. 

When breaking ground in the spring, do not work the ground when the soil is wet. If worked when too moist, heavy soils become hard, compacted, and will limit growth for the entire season. If a handful of the soil can be pressed into a ball, delay until it is drier

 

3. Select the right Seeds

A garden or allotment cannot be planted in one day. Some vegetables grow best in cool temperatures, while others require warm soil and air.

  • Choose what’s Right for the Climate

    Plants, flowers, fruit and vegetables all have very individual preferred growing conditions and you need to consider the conditions that they do best in as they are all affected in both a positive or negative way by things such as exposure to sunlight, heat and wind resistance etc. frost and extreme cold conditions.

  • Choosing what’s Right for the Location

    You don’t see banana trees in UK gardens (yet) and, similarly, many seeds won’t flourish as you want them to without a tropical climate so get to understand the nature of our climate.

    The climate is slowly changing and you might want to consider new plants, for example which are more drought resistant. 

 

Top 3 Books

 

"Home Vegetable Garden Secrets"

The Internet's leading source of Advice

Hundreds of tips, techniques and secrets about vegetable gardens, such as

  • How to create a planting table so you don't plant the wrong plants at the wrong time - too early or too late

  • How to keep your plants living, reduce water use and save money, all at the same time

  • Many, many more

For details click here

 
     
 

" How to make the World's Best Compost. "

Are you one of the many who has a compost heap at the bottom of the garden or corner of the allotment ?  Every wonder just how the most successful horticulturalists get their plants, flowers and vegetables to look so good ?

One of the secrets is the compost they use.  Rob Turners book contains Step by step advice on how to make Natural Fertilizer.  Without using Bins, Turning Or Odour    For details click Here!

 
     
 

"Companion Planting"

Why is it that some plants grow enthusiastically, while the same variety grown in another part of the garden or allotment is sickly or stunted? Could it be that some plants enhance the growth of each other and some hinder them?


Companion Planting contains information, passed down through time, on which plants to grow together to achieve healthy, vibrant plants and vegetables - all crammed into a simple, easy to use guide.
For details click Here!

     

 

 

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