In the gulf coast region Texas I just planted my third and last round of potatoes before the big heated summer kicks in I’m putting in green onion and pulling up the onion every thing matured early because of the great rain showers and actually performed well now is time for the really heat tolerant stuff melons, okra, eggplant tomato and squash. Mr Dowding really teaches making the most of your space I doubled up on each onion wow iv doubled the onion harvest
Yes! In NS, Canada with such a short season I need to pack it in as much as possible! I use a high intensity approach and really push the limits by planting lots in any spaces! By mid summer the garden looks like a jungle but such a productive jungle!! ❤
Haha Charles, I don’t think you said what you meant. As you well know, as per the famous 3 sisters planting method employed for thousands of years across the American continent, the traditional companions for sweetcorn are climbing beans and squash. The symbiotic relationship is that the climbing beans add nitrogen to the soil and climb the sweetcorn, the squash vine runs in shade beneath the sweetcorn, keeping down weeds, and then gets immediately into it’s full stride after the sweetcorn is cropped and it’s already strongly established. Oh, and thanks again for all your excellent work. Following your channel has been an education to me and inspired me to seek as much knowledge as possible relating to no dig / no till, soil biology & the symbiotic relationships between plants and soil biology. You’ve opened up a world for me 👍
I'm not sure the three sisters works in the UK. I've tried it without success and then watched numerous vids saying it's not a thing here.Probably the weather. I've had great success with sweetcorn and beans separately, I haven't had great squash success yet..but this maybe my year. hopefully!
Agree about the heat. Last year the three sisters method worked a treat for me here in London! It also depends on the type of climbing beans sown-and their harvesting times. French /runners -no. Borlotti/ Toledo- yes
I asked you about growing a lot in a small space in a short from last week, so I’m just going to imagine you made this video just for me! 😅 Great information!
I always learn from listening to you, Mr Dowding, thank you very much for sharing your wisdom with us. I also feel better - calmer and happier - after listening to your videos.
Charles, I grow corn in the midwest in the states. I grow them closer together about 8-10 inches apart. The same spacing between rows. I see big farms doing it so I tried it. They're such a heavy feeder if you want nice corn. I layer old manure thickly like 3-4 inches deep.. Lots of water. Fantastic corn.
My 2nd year no dig is doing much better than the last. We're also getting good rains and it hasn't been overly hot. I'm loving it! Thanks again for sharing all you do! :)
Thank you for talking about your failures as well as successes. I also had trouble germinating carrots, but it gives me hope when a master grower like you also has failures. We keep trying!
If this helps, I now chit my carrot seeds indoors, sandwiched between damp kitchen roll, then promptly plant them into dibbed holes in the no dig bed after filling them with potting compost. Guaranteed success and at the planting density you prefer! Might not suit a market garden, but it suits an allotment.
Very Helpful, Charles, but I wish you'd have shown some of this two months ago, or whenever you were actually sowing the turnips and spinach in amongst the potatoes!
@@CharlesDowding1nodig Thanks for replying :) Fair enough... maybe I need to access more social media, though, at the moment, I'm actually trying to get away from all that! At least I'll know for next year, and guess I can get a bit more creative myself too...
I'd plant garlic between the corn plants, and harvest green garlic. Use like you would green onion. I normally use green garlic with snacks, but there's also a delicious stew with leeks, green onions, green garlic and olives.
I put 30 tomato and pepper plants each in a 2x30 bed-tomatoes in the back, peppers in the front. Basil goes in between the peppers and sometimes marigolds if I'm feeling it. I have a 6'x32' T-trellis of cattle panels running down the middle. My only concession is I try to alternate cherry tomatoes with beefsteaks, all indeterminate. The growth habits are different and that helps. Sometimes I prune but I usually just take the lower leaves off. By September it's a jungle but I get plenty of fruit. I weave them through the cattle panel and when they hit the top I let them run. It's mostly heirlooms which I grow for taste and some don't have hybrid-style productivity but they all grow as much as they're destined to. I'm fortunate to have good sun and air circulation.
Hi Charles, we seemed to have had a false start to the rainy season , and the sun is hoooottttt. Yeah that hot and gardening is not so much fun right now . But by yourhelp and God grace.. I had been enjoying continous planting and interplanting hardly been to the market for the year ... thanks and keep up the good work....
I’ve been no dig for prob 6 or 7 years now and I love it Gods Amazing earth He has left us is a great precursor to the perfect earth after the tribulation….
Thanks for the inspiring video Charles. Will Bonsall always plants Edamame interplanted with sweetcorn. Though his between row spacing is much larger than yours, within row about the same. He points out that both crops once mature need regular harvests.
i cant thank you enough charles im 62 n i made my first lot of compost and its working so well the knowlege i get from your videos are priceless yes i still get failures but since watching your videos my success is coming on leaps n bounds
Thank you for another brilliant video Charles! I love watching you talk about plants, you are so animated and your passion is tremendously inspiring :D I've planted leafy kale, sown carrots, spring onions and herbs, and prepared to sow cucumber and corn today. Greetings from Norway!
I’ve chanced putting two spare tomato plants in a space in a raised onion bed , I’m amazed how fast they are growing, in fact this year because of shortages in the shops I’m growing a lot more , I’ve just planted leeks in a space next to some peas that are already in flower so fingers crossed they will be ok as I’ll just cut the peas off, also the leeks are on the sunny side of the peas not shaded. I couldn’t have done any of this without you Charles you are my gardening Guru.❤️
I had some spare lettuce seedlings and thought I’d chuck them in with the onions just because I didn’t want to throw them 😅 and they’re doing amazing, I couldn’t believe it! I’ll definitely be doing it again next year 👍
Brilliant info, Charles ❤ I've been picking Giant Japanese Red Mustard Greens for the past 2 months.Cut and come again, of course! And I'm picking tomatoes 🍅 Happy Gardening, My Friend 💚 ❤Peggy❤
Having a lifelong back problem I cannot bend easily or without much discomfort, so decided to grow my veggies in raised beds surrounded by lawn, no more trampling around in mud which I cannot STAND sticky messy stuff. Thank you for content CHARLES ❤
My carrots have suffered from slugs and so have my marigold's. Interesting about the wood lice, never thought of it. Anyway, since I was feeling deflated I was happy to hear you're going through the same thing Charles 😃
Recipy against slugs: Pull 2 bulbs of garlic till the cloves are peeled. Smash them with a knife and put them in a liter of boiling water. Let it cook for 10 minutes. Pour it then through a strainer into a bowl. Or directly into a glass bottle. Now you have a garlic extract. For using it: put 1 liter of clean water into a flowersprayer and join 2 tablespoons of the garlic extract. Spray it around the plants that de slugs like to eat. I am also trying it for de top of my swede plants where other creatures come to eat. Good luck!
Exciting times Charles! Thanks for sharing this video I’m now looking at my seed packets to see what to sow next! Hoping it will start to get warmer as here in Suffolk feels more like November! 👍👍
thank you for this helpful video. You are a very neat and organized gardener/farmer. I think you should do a video, maybe fast-motion, of you and your helpers just tending to your beds. It would certainly be helpful to me and I suspect other viewers as well. thanks again. L
Really great examples that can give us all ideas on how to best use our space. I’m trying something a little different the year, at least for me. Here in the Midwest US my peas are always pokey, and they take up a lot of real estate. I tried doing pea transplants last year to speed them along, but the ground is so cold in March and early April that they didn’t end up maturing any faster than direct sow. This year I planted my peas in the bed I was planning to also put tomatoes. The peas are currently flowering, and the tomatoes were just planted this week. The tomato supports are helping hold up the peas, which should have produced over the next few weeks and be ready to cut down before those tomatoes get too large. The nitrogen boost might also be good for the tomatoes? Will see how it works out. Last year I used some of your hints on multi-sowing onions where there was a little room here or there, and they were very happy.
Love seeing your setup. I am starting a new garden this year. Got a greenhouse to build and have covered my market garden area with weed fabric to kill off the grass and persitent weeds, nettles and mint. Going to dig it over once, layer with cardboard and then get planting!
you don't need to dig it at all if you cover with cardboard and compost, just take out the perennial pests/weed, like cuch Gras, bindweed, dandelions as good as you can... pls don't harm/brutalize the soil with digging... my opinion
Well done, as usual. I'm more focussed on building soil than succession planting but I still manage. Winter Kohlrabi following sweet corn, that sort of thing. I'm very glad to have your videos to expand my way of thinking and planting. Thanks!
Thank you so much. This was very useful. I will interplant some autumn crops in between my garlic. I should have thank you earlier since nearly all my garden knowledge I got from you. 😊
I can only grow in containers, so density is essential. I still have plants to "pot up" but the flowers this year are taking priority, all are edible, plus deter pests, double win. Quite a few are perennials, meaning I don't have to plant them again unless they die. I finally understand succession planting for containers, it's different than beds, but still possible.
Hey Charles! I look forward to each and every video but this one is teasing me into confessing a few truths I have learned in my own garden. The corn that you have, I planted last season and used the North American Indian trick of planting the three sisters. Perhaps that could work for you too! I am also glad you are growing Cumin. One of my favorite receipts (Ye olde English word for recipe according to the late Jennifer Pattison) is so simple and hearty and vegetarian. Bake a potato in it's jacket (skin) after pricking a few holes to let the steam escape. After an hour remove from the oven and let cool. Then cut in half and scoop the flesh out of the potato and mash together with some steamed or BBQ'd golden squash or yellow zucchini. Add some butter and cumin powder into the mix, then add back into the half shell of the potato. If I could eat anything fresh from my garden, I would be happy for the rest of my allotted time on this earth. Cheers!
Sweet recipe thanks Craig. Yes many viewers are recommending three sisters and the difficulty with it here is our summers are considerably cooler than the continental ones in America where it comes from, and also compared to yours. So there's not time for everything to mature and for the beans to dry. I believe also it was for dry mate it's not sweetcorn.
You always give us great ideas, Charles! I was looking at your wooden potting benches as inspiration for a small green-house in my NYC community garden. Pot on!! 🌱🪴✨
Thank you so much for sharing this! I was just thinking today how it would be best to plant my seeds as it is time and this gave me clarity on that 🙏🏼🌿🌸
Fantastic video! Showing the actual mechanics,timing and thought behind interplanting is brilliant. Thank you so much! I find succumbing to wanting to jam everything in without counting the weeks. to harvest.. I think it is because I haven't seen enough cycles to know really.. and then also our shift in seasons this year is dramatic.. You gave some interesting combos too I hadn't thought of.. I have yet to try garlic...
Thank you for these insights. On Monday I am going to sow some more seeds. I definitely need to rewatch and take notes of what I can put in when my potatoes finish..or my shelling peas. Planted marigolds in with my tomatoes. Going to sow more beetroot and chard. I direct sowed and that was spotty. I like the control of starting in modules. Just wish I had a small greenhouse space. But thankful for my ground space. Really, the garden is such a special place for me. My composted horse manure (old stuff from a neighbor) has many weed seeds that germinate. But it’s free and the hoe makes quick work when they are tiny.
Świetne rozwiązanie, przestrzeń wykorzystana do perfekcji. Bardzo mnie się podoba pełne zagospodarowanie miejsca przez cały rok, życzę obfitych plonów, pozdrawiam gorąco.
For once my garlic has grown really strongly this year (the elephant garlic less so though for some reason), and there's no sign of any rust anywhere in the garden - i'm guessing this is down to the more favourable weather we're getting this year. Time now for me to go and interplant a few salad leaves. Thanks for the reminder.
Saudade Charles Dawding que deus o todp poderoso te abençoe sempre engrandecido seija deus muito lindo sua horta brasil te ama voce se parece com meu irmão Emerson paz mil bjs pra voce esua família
Hey Charles Great video once again- Our weather temps here in Brisbane Australia are just weird. I have had my Cabbage /Cauliflower/ Broccoli plus all other winter veges in for well over 6 weeks now & hardly any progress, we are nearly finished our Autumn & really cannot see any Brassicas this year at all. Very despondent with gardening here but I will keep on. Cheers Denise- Australia
After watching many of your videos I now see a very big difference to German Garden RUclipsr. It looks to me as if you never cover the soil/compost with a layer of mulch material. Here in Germany we put mulch like cutted grass on top of the soil to prevent it from drying out. Why are you not using mulch in top? I love your videos. It's so much inspiration.
I have crops pretty close together, in general i do a row of leaf veggies, next to a row of root crop. As i hardly have any weeds, i don't need much space between rows
I literally just opened YT to find videos on exactly this topic as I have far too many plants! I was also tempted to plant my toms closer together than 60cm (I was thinking 50) so thank you so much! My leeks in modules are so puny compared to yours, I wish I had homeacres quality compost
It's great to see what you have growing and to compare to what I have growing, I've got some carrots interplanted with garlic, parsnips in between some Broad Bean's and beetroot and planning on putting in some multi sown spring onions in between my lettuce, struggling to get courgette and cucumbers to germinate and just put in another bed for sweetcorn, I was hanging on a bit before planting out sweetcorn but there around 6-8" since I potted them on a few weeks ago, seeing yours out now think I will put mine out tomorrow and dwarf French beans just popping up that I might try between the corn, only trying them out this year 3x3 block, if there successful I'll grow more next year 😁👍
No worries because the garlic harvest is in early June! That's one reason why this combination is so successful. By the middle of June all we have there is the French marigolds
What are the plants at the edge of the sweetcorn bed? Pumpkins? I plan on putting my sweetcorn in the pumpkin and melon bed this year. What spacing would you use for the pumpkins in that case? And I have another question: Can you still eat spinach once it starts going to flower? I thought I heard something about the leaves getting inedible then. Is that true? I've learned so much from you already, Charles! 🧑🌾
Charles, do you leave your plant roots in the soil after harvest? Saw that farmers would harvest lettuce by cutting off the tops and leave the roots to discompose.
I was going to try no dig in my back garden but my gardener friend built boxes. My cat loves the boxes. We get full sun in the front. I have to be brave and attempt no dig minus boxes in front garden. I should go for it.
I've been doing a different kind of set of experiments to maximise use of space, mostly to do with testing what spacings can maximise yields of various vegetables. I plant radish and spring onion clumps out in 10cm*10cm grids and they do really well. This year, I've put 250 onion sets (5 varieties, including two red ones) at 12cm in the row and 10cm between the rows (so 3sqm total area) and so far, I lost two to birds pulling them out and one or two haven't fired, so I've got 245 odd onions growing really well. I also sow stations of parsnips 15cm apart within rows and 15cm between rows, so potential for 40 plants in about 1sqm. If you use 20cm * 20cm equilateral triangle grid, the parsnips are of course bigger.
Charles, you mentioned possible problems with a cabbage variety. I often seem to end up buying vegetable varieties promoted by the seed companies. Please would it be possible for you to make a video about vegetable varieties that you have found to be reliable.
It's also problems with viability of seed. That could be a difficult video because it depends what characteristics you'd like, which parts you like to eat and what climates you have. I shall think about it. I give many details on this page of my site charlesdowding.co.uk/seeds-and-varieties/
Great video Charles. A couple of months ago I planted an 8'x4' raised bed with 1 year old Asparagus plants. Is thare any reason why I cant grow Spinach in between them in May June?
tell me your opinion: potatoes in container early early spring, on top Bok Choy which is harvested just before potatoes emerge.all covered with fleece.
Hi Charles. Perfect timing as I was wondering same. What other plants can I plant between rows or garlic? I have 7 varieties of garlic soft and hardneck so the beds will start freeing up mid of June through July
Hello Charles The garlic you grow in rows outside your greenhouse; how close together do you plant the cloves please? Trying to plan for when I plant my next batch in the Autumn! Thanks in advance, best wishes, Denise
I live in an area with wild temp and moisture swings in the Spring time. Two weeks ago we were getting frost on the cars and now day time highs are in the 90s.....two weeks from now, we will be back to low 60s or high 50s for the high. Am I better off waiting until temps stabilize to grow things like Radish and Carrot? Or just waiting until fall? Our summers are dry and hot until September. After that it's a crap shoot.
Oooh you have a difficult climate and I would so those in April as soon as the ground has thawed and then again in July for carrots, September for radish as long as you can keep the seeds moist
Apa kabar Bapak, lama saya tidak melihat video anda, saya harap anda dan keluarga anda selalu sehat dan tetap bersemangat berkebun..salam hangat dari saya..🙏
Funny, I heard the rain and for a split second, thought it was here, no such luck, no rain in ages!
‼️ wish you some
Charles Dowding is the RZA of gardening.
In the gulf coast region Texas I just planted my third and last round of potatoes before the big heated summer kicks in I’m putting in green onion and pulling up the onion every thing matured early because of the great rain showers and actually performed well now is time for the really heat tolerant stuff melons, okra, eggplant tomato and squash. Mr Dowding really teaches making the most of your space I doubled up on each onion wow iv doubled the onion harvest
Stop living somewhere glorious will you?🏖 Come and live in the UK like the rest of us😢
‼️ yup I am fortunate
Nice to hear and I hope the summer goes well for you, it sounds quite a challenge but at least you do have the warmth for those vegetables
@@CharlesDowding1nodig Summer was brutal last year hoping for something better this year
Do you mean sweet potatoes? It's too hot here for Irish
Thank´s Charles!
🙂
Absolutely love your methods and common sense, soulful approach to growing beautiful food and flowers. Deepest thanks for all I’ve learned from you.
So nice thanks!
Hi Robin where are you from?😊
I never thought about timing before. Thanks.
😀
Yes! In NS, Canada with such a short season I need to pack it in as much as possible! I use a high intensity approach and really push the limits by planting lots in any spaces! By mid summer the garden looks like a jungle but such a productive jungle!! ❤
Sounds great!
VERY GOOD
Haha Charles, I don’t think you said what you meant. As you well know, as per the famous 3 sisters planting method employed for thousands of years across the American continent, the traditional companions for sweetcorn are climbing beans and squash.
The symbiotic relationship is that the climbing beans add nitrogen to the soil and climb the sweetcorn, the squash vine runs in shade beneath the sweetcorn, keeping down weeds, and then gets immediately into it’s full stride after the sweetcorn is cropped and it’s already strongly established.
Oh, and thanks again for all your excellent work. Following your channel has been an education to me and inspired me to seek as much knowledge as possible relating to no dig / no till, soil biology & the symbiotic relationships between plants and soil biology.
You’ve opened up a world for me 👍
I'm not sure the three sisters works in the UK. I've tried it without success and then watched numerous vids saying it's not a thing here.Probably the weather. I've had great success with sweetcorn and beans separately, I haven't had great squash success yet..but this maybe my year. hopefully!
I agree, same
Thanks, nice to hear, just need more heat!
Agree about the heat. Last year the three sisters method worked a treat for me here in London! It also depends on the type of climbing beans sown-and their harvesting times. French /runners -no. Borlotti/ Toledo- yes
I have also tried the three sisters method and it worked reasonably well but I found that climbing French bean do well but Runner beans do not.
Your gardens always amaze me, beautiful as ever!
thank you for your kind words 🙂
I asked you about growing a lot in a small space in a short from last week, so I’m just going to imagine you made this video just for me! 😅
Great information!
🙂 🤲 Perfect
i love the twig trellis for the peas at the end of the bed.
I always learn from listening to you, Mr Dowding, thank you very much for sharing your wisdom with us. I also feel better - calmer and happier - after listening to your videos.
💚 great
Charles, I grow corn in the midwest in the states. I grow them closer together about 8-10 inches apart. The same spacing between rows. I see big farms doing it so I tried it. They're such a heavy feeder if you want nice corn. I layer old manure thickly like 3-4 inches deep.. Lots of water. Fantastic corn.
Thanks for this, nice tip and I shall try closer!
My 2nd year no dig is doing much better than the last. We're also getting good rains and it hasn't been overly hot. I'm loving it! Thanks again for sharing all you do! :)
this is great to hear and thank you
i love it, thank you. this is what i need: more propositions :) please!
Woo-hoo. Another great idea to do a productive jungle! Thank you Charles for this awesome tip . God bless.
😀 coool!
Thank you for talking about your failures as well as successes. I also had trouble germinating carrots, but it gives me hope when a master grower like you also has failures. We keep trying!
Go you, commitment wins!
If this helps, I now chit my carrot seeds indoors, sandwiched between damp kitchen roll, then promptly plant them into dibbed holes in the no dig bed after filling them with potting compost. Guaranteed success and at the planting density you prefer! Might not suit a market garden, but it suits an allotment.
Great video, thanks Charles, steady away!
🙂
Great Video Charles, thanks, every little nugget of information is like gold :)
Ah that is great to hear Stuart
Lovely, thank you!
Thank you
Very Helpful, Charles, but I wish you'd have shown some of this two months ago, or whenever you were actually sowing the turnips and spinach in amongst the potatoes!
I post these things on IG and Twitter, FB. More inter sowing all the time as I'm suggesting.
@@CharlesDowding1nodig Thanks for replying :) Fair enough... maybe I need to access more social media, though, at the moment, I'm actually trying to get away from all that! At least I'll know for next year, and guess I can get a bit more creative myself too...
I'd plant garlic between the corn plants, and harvest green garlic. Use like you would green onion. I normally use green garlic with snacks, but there's also a delicious stew with leeks, green onions, green garlic and olives.
Hi Diona where are you from?
Nice clip
Thank you
Thank you Charles!
🙂
Great ideas. It’s hard not to crowd tomatoes, especially when you want many varieties.
I put 30 tomato and pepper plants each in a 2x30 bed-tomatoes in the back, peppers in the front. Basil goes in between the peppers and sometimes marigolds if I'm feeling it. I have a 6'x32' T-trellis of cattle panels running down the middle. My only concession is I try to alternate cherry tomatoes with beefsteaks, all indeterminate. The growth habits are different and that helps. Sometimes I prune but I usually just take the lower leaves off. By September it's a jungle but I get plenty of fruit. I weave them through the cattle panel and when they hit the top I let them run. It's mostly heirlooms which I grow for taste and some don't have hybrid-style productivity but they all grow as much as they're destined to.
I'm fortunate to have good sun and air circulation.
Hi Charles, we seemed to have had a false start to the rainy season , and the sun is hoooottttt. Yeah that hot and gardening is not so much fun right now . But by yourhelp and God grace.. I had been enjoying continous planting and interplanting hardly been to the market for the year ... thanks and keep up the good work....
Oooh I hope the weather improves, I'm glad you are growing well
Pickled chard is a splendid snack!
I took your advice about multi-sowing beets a few years ago, works beautifully. Thank you!
💚
I’ve been no dig for prob 6 or 7 years now and I love it
Gods Amazing earth He has left us is a great precursor to the perfect earth after the tribulation….
That is nice Matt
I'm always amazed at how fast and healthy your seedlings grow!
🙂
It’s all in the compost I use his method and almost eliminates damping off
Thanks for the inspiring video Charles. Will Bonsall always plants Edamame interplanted with sweetcorn. Though his between row spacing is much larger than yours, within row about the same. He points out that both crops once mature need regular harvests.
Cheers Don good to hear
i cant thank you enough charles im 62 n i made my first lot of compost and its working so well the knowlege i get from your videos are priceless yes i still get failures but since watching your videos my success is coming on leaps n bounds
Go you Geoff, this warms my heart!
Love your work I have 1 acre in Ireland which I’m now going to change slowly into growing veg all tips welcome
Great video
Thanks, lovely to hear
Thank you for another brilliant video Charles! I love watching you talk about plants, you are so animated and your passion is tremendously inspiring :D I've planted leafy kale, sown carrots, spring onions and herbs, and prepared to sow cucumber and corn today. Greetings from Norway!
Ah thanks Kristine. Nice to hear you are making the most of this special time!
I’ve chanced putting two spare tomato plants in a space in a raised onion bed , I’m amazed how fast they are growing, in fact this year because of shortages in the shops I’m growing a lot more , I’ve just planted leeks in a space next to some peas that are already in flower so fingers crossed they will be ok as I’ll just cut the peas off, also the leeks are on the sunny side of the peas not shaded. I couldn’t have done any of this without you Charles you are my gardening Guru.❤️
Sounds excellent Lynda
Here we go, the seasons I miss ;) Thanks Charles
Haha spring!
It's long this year!!!
Thank you Charles. Enjoyed your video again. Like the enthusiasm.
Respect from Africa 🇿🇦
thank you, glad you enjoyed it 🙂
@@CharlesDowding1nodig you are an inspiration.
I had some spare lettuce seedlings and thought I’d chuck them in with the onions just because I didn’t want to throw them 😅 and they’re doing amazing, I couldn’t believe it! I’ll definitely be doing it again next year 👍
So much useful information in such a short video . Thanks you Charles.
🙂
Brilliant info, Charles ❤
I've been picking Giant Japanese Red Mustard Greens for the past 2 months.Cut and come again, of course! And I'm picking tomatoes 🍅
Happy Gardening, My Friend 💚
❤Peggy❤
Thanks Peggy. No heat here!
Thankyou! Tomatos and melons being planted out tomorrow
I am glad you find it helpful
Your style of gardening is a like a graceful beautiful dance, it's all in the timing and steps, everything working together in harmony.
Ah thanks 💚
Having a lifelong back problem I cannot bend easily or without much discomfort, so decided to grow my veggies in raised beds surrounded by lawn, no more trampling around in mud which I cannot STAND sticky messy stuff. Thank you for content CHARLES ❤
Thanks Caroline, nice to hear
I love this
Thank you 🙂
I grow gem squash between the sweetcorn and beans (borlotti or Faba from choice) that will climb the corn
great video most enjoyable
thank you
Yep, must shoehorn some strawberries into my greenhouse 😊
My carrots have suffered from slugs and so have my marigold's. Interesting about the wood lice, never thought of it. Anyway, since I was feeling deflated I was happy to hear you're going through the same thing Charles 😃
Best of luck! Yes it helps to share the problems!
Recipy against slugs:
Pull 2 bulbs of garlic till the cloves are peeled. Smash them with a knife and put them in a liter of boiling water. Let it cook for 10 minutes. Pour it then through a strainer into a bowl. Or directly into a glass bottle. Now you have a garlic extract.
For using it: put 1 liter of clean water into a flowersprayer and join 2 tablespoons of the garlic extract. Spray it around the plants that de slugs like to eat. I am also trying it for de top of my swede plants where other creatures come to eat. Good luck!
Great reminders and hints as always. Your garden is looking so lush and full, an inspiration.
thank you 🙂
Exciting times Charles! Thanks for sharing this video I’m now looking at my seed packets to see what to sow next! Hoping it will start to get warmer as here in Suffolk feels more like November! 👍👍
Should be in the 60's F but it's been hitting the 80's. I won't say more about that. 6B u.s.a.
It looks quite cool until the end of May! But that still leaves a lot of time for growing, fingers crossed
Inspiring as always Charles.
Thankyou!
My nodig garden still amazes me.....
🏆 nice to hear Connie
Top video Charlrs, lots of great strategies.
Yes indeed Charles those methods work. More people should try them.
Lots of cool ideas, thanks, I do a mash of things all growing together in my gardens but this has inspired me to plan things out a little more.
So glad that it has inspired you 🙂
thank you for this helpful video. You are a very neat and organized gardener/farmer. I think you should do a video, maybe fast-motion, of you and your helpers just tending to your beds. It would certainly be helpful to me and I suspect other viewers as well. thanks again. L
Nice thought thanks
Really great examples that can give us all ideas on how to best use our space. I’m trying something a little different the year, at least for me. Here in the Midwest US my peas are always pokey, and they take up a lot of real estate. I tried doing pea transplants last year to speed them along, but the ground is so cold in March and early April that they didn’t end up maturing any faster than direct sow. This year I planted my peas in the bed I was planning to also put tomatoes. The peas are currently flowering, and the tomatoes were just planted this week. The tomato supports are helping hold up the peas, which should have produced over the next few weeks and be ready to cut down before those tomatoes get too large. The nitrogen boost might also be good for the tomatoes? Will see how it works out. Last year I used some of your hints on multi-sowing onions where there was a little room here or there, and they were very happy.
Really good to see this, I think that's very enterprising and sounds promising 💚
Love seeing your setup. I am starting a new garden this year. Got a greenhouse to build and have covered my market garden area with weed fabric to kill off the grass and persitent weeds, nettles and mint. Going to dig it over once, layer with cardboard and then get planting!
you don't need to dig it at all if you cover with cardboard and compost, just take out the perennial pests/weed, like cuch Gras, bindweed, dandelions as good as you can... pls don't harm/brutalize the soil with digging... my opinion
Iv been following you for ages and have read your books! God wish i could work for you. So inspiring sir.
That is so nice, thanks!
You are such an inspiration, makes me wanta get in my garden after watching what you share. Have a wonderful weekend.
thank you 🙂
Well done, as usual. I'm more focussed on building soil than succession planting but I still manage. Winter Kohlrabi following sweet corn, that sort of thing. I'm very glad to have your videos to expand my way of thinking and planting.
Thanks!
Sounds good Michelle
This is sooooo helpful, thank you for sharing!! 😊
💚
Good show, cheers Charles
thank you 🙂
Thank you so much. This was very useful. I will interplant some autumn crops in between my garlic.
I should have thank you earlier since nearly all my garden knowledge I got from you. 😊
Glad it was helpful and thank you for your kind words 🙂
I can only grow in containers, so density is essential. I still have plants to "pot up" but the flowers this year are taking priority, all are edible, plus deter pests, double win. Quite a few are perennials, meaning I don't have to plant them again unless they die.
I finally understand succession planting for containers, it's different than beds, but still possible.
Hey Charles! I look forward to each and every video but this one is teasing me into confessing a few truths I have learned in my own garden. The corn that you have, I planted last season and used the North American Indian trick of planting the three sisters. Perhaps that could work for you too! I am also glad you are growing Cumin. One of my favorite receipts (Ye olde English word for recipe according to the late Jennifer Pattison) is so simple and hearty and vegetarian. Bake a potato in it's jacket (skin) after pricking a few holes to let the steam escape. After an hour remove from the oven and let cool. Then cut in half and scoop the flesh out of the potato and mash together with some steamed or BBQ'd golden squash or yellow zucchini. Add some butter and cumin powder into the mix, then add back into the half shell of the potato. If I could eat anything fresh from my garden, I would be happy for the rest of my allotted time on this earth. Cheers!
Sweet recipe thanks Craig.
Yes many viewers are recommending three sisters and the difficulty with it here is our summers are considerably cooler than the continental ones in America where it comes from, and also compared to yours. So there's not time for everything to mature and for the beans to dry. I believe also it was for dry mate it's not sweetcorn.
You always give us great ideas, Charles! I was looking at your wooden potting benches as inspiration for a small green-house in my NYC community garden. Pot on!! 🌱🪴✨
💚
Thank you so much for sharing this! I was just thinking today how it would be best to plant my seeds as it is time and this gave me clarity on that 🙏🏼🌿🌸
Perfect timing 🙂
Fantastic video! Showing the actual mechanics,timing and thought behind interplanting is brilliant. Thank you so much! I find succumbing to wanting to jam everything in without counting the weeks. to harvest.. I think it is because I haven't seen enough cycles to know really.. and then also our shift in seasons this year is dramatic.. You gave some interesting combos too I hadn't thought of.. I have yet to try garlic...
Thanks Valeria
@@CharlesDowding1nodig Thank You!!
Hi Valeria where are you from?
Superb - looking so fantastic 🎉
Thank you for these insights. On Monday I am going to sow some more seeds. I definitely need to rewatch and take notes of what I can put in when my potatoes finish..or my shelling peas. Planted marigolds in with my tomatoes. Going to sow more beetroot and chard. I direct sowed and that was spotty. I like the control of starting in modules. Just wish I had a small greenhouse space. But thankful for my ground space. Really, the garden is such a special place for me. My composted horse manure (old stuff from a neighbor) has many weed seeds that germinate. But it’s free and the hoe makes quick work when they are tiny.
Sounds really good Anna
Świetne rozwiązanie, przestrzeń wykorzystana do perfekcji.
Bardzo mnie się podoba pełne zagospodarowanie miejsca przez cały rok, życzę obfitych plonów,
pozdrawiam gorąco.
thank you 🙂 and you also
For once my garlic has grown really strongly this year (the elephant garlic less so though for some reason), and there's no sign of any rust anywhere in the garden - i'm guessing this is down to the more favourable weather we're getting this year. Time now for me to go and interplant a few salad leaves. Thanks for the reminder.
That is great Tony. I am just seeing some rust!
Amazing advise once again from The singer from Coldplay’s Big Brother
😂
Saudade Charles Dawding que deus o todp poderoso te abençoe sempre engrandecido seija deus muito lindo sua horta brasil te ama voce se parece com meu irmão Emerson paz mil bjs pra voce esua família
thank you for your kind words. I send good wishes to your family also.
Hey Charles Great video once again- Our weather temps here in Brisbane Australia are just weird. I have had my Cabbage /Cauliflower/ Broccoli plus all other winter veges in for well over 6 weeks now & hardly any progress, we are nearly finished our Autumn & really cannot see any Brassicas this year at all. Very despondent with gardening here but I will keep on. Cheers Denise- Australia
Oh Denise that sounds rally difficult, you mean it has been too cool for them?
@@CharlesDowding1nodig No Charles far too Hot
Oh my goodness, can't imagine that, hope it comes good in winter
i just wish i had enough seedlings to pack em in like you do!
That problem is easily remedied! Sow more seeds today, and tomorrow, and next week, and ...
After watching many of your videos I now see a very big difference to German Garden RUclipsr.
It looks to me as if you never cover the soil/compost with a layer of mulch material.
Here in Germany we put mulch like cutted grass on top of the soil to prevent it from drying out.
Why are you not using mulch in top?
I love your videos. It's so much inspiration.
In many ways, compost *is* a mulch. The top of it may dry out, but many compost types are coarse and spongy enough to easily withstand that.
I have crops pretty close together, in general i do a row of leaf veggies, next to a row of root crop. As i hardly have any weeds, i don't need much space between rows
Cool Ed 🌱🥕
Great ideas here, thanks.
🙂 🙂
I literally just opened YT to find videos on exactly this topic as I have far too many plants! I was also tempted to plant my toms closer together than 60cm (I was thinking 50) so thank you so much! My leeks in modules are so puny compared to yours, I wish I had homeacres quality compost
💚!
It's great to see what you have growing and to compare to what I have growing, I've got some carrots interplanted with garlic, parsnips in between some Broad Bean's and beetroot and planning on putting in some multi sown spring onions in between my lettuce, struggling to get courgette and cucumbers to germinate and just put in another bed for sweetcorn, I was hanging on a bit before planting out sweetcorn but there around 6-8" since I potted them on a few weeks ago, seeing yours out now think I will put mine out tomorrow and dwarf French beans just popping up that I might try between the corn, only trying them out this year 3x3 block, if there successful I'll grow more next year 😁👍
Sounds good Mick :)
Hey Charles, how does it work with the garlic when you have to stop watering it in the end of its Season but tomatoes want to be watered?
Garlic is plenty far away from tomatos
No worries because the garlic harvest is in early June! That's one reason why this combination is so successful. By the middle of June all we have there is the French marigolds
What are the plants at the edge of the sweetcorn bed? Pumpkins?
I plan on putting my sweetcorn in the pumpkin and melon bed this year. What spacing would you use for the pumpkins in that case?
And I have another question: Can you still eat spinach once it starts going to flower? I thought I heard something about the leaves getting inedible then. Is that true?
I've learned so much from you already, Charles! 🧑🌾
You share great information Sir🎉 I would like to internalize your experiences in your garden and work with you for many years. Greetings from Türkiye.
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Charles, do you leave your plant roots in the soil after harvest? Saw that farmers would harvest lettuce by cutting off the tops and leave the roots to discompose.
Yes exactly. Food for microbes
I was going to try no dig in my back garden but my gardener friend built boxes. My cat loves the boxes. We get full sun in the front. I have to be brave and attempt no dig minus boxes in front garden. I should go for it.
That's a great idea!
I've been doing a different kind of set of experiments to maximise use of space, mostly to do with testing what spacings can maximise yields of various vegetables. I plant radish and spring onion clumps out in 10cm*10cm grids and they do really well. This year, I've put 250 onion sets (5 varieties, including two red ones) at 12cm in the row and 10cm between the rows (so 3sqm total area) and so far, I lost two to birds pulling them out and one or two haven't fired, so I've got 245 odd onions growing really well. I also sow stations of parsnips 15cm apart within rows and 15cm between rows, so potential for 40 plants in about 1sqm. If you use 20cm * 20cm equilateral triangle grid, the parsnips are of course bigger.
Innovative as ever Rhys, thanks for sharing
Charles, you mentioned possible problems with a cabbage variety.
I often seem to end up buying vegetable varieties promoted by the seed companies. Please would it be possible for you to make a video about vegetable varieties that you have found to be reliable.
It's also problems with viability of seed.
That could be a difficult video because it depends what characteristics you'd like, which parts you like to eat and what climates you have. I shall think about it. I give many details on this page of my site charlesdowding.co.uk/seeds-and-varieties/
@CharlesDowding1nodig Many thanks Charles.
🙂
Great video Charles.
A couple of months ago I planted an 8'x4' raised bed with 1 year old Asparagus plants. Is thare any reason why I cant grow Spinach in between them in May June?
Thanks Martin, and I would do that
tell me your opinion: potatoes in container early early spring, on top Bok Choy which is harvested just before potatoes emerge.all covered with fleece.
Sounds promising :) and potato shoots will emerge while bok choi finishes 😀
My garden soil became hard because of rain. Though we rack before now we need to do again.
It definitely needs some organic matter on the surface for more protection
I will put compost after racking. Perhaps that will change.
ami tambien me gustan los cebollines...en sopa y carne azada😊
Buen punto, ¡y son fáciles de cultivar!
Hi Charles, how deep is your “weed free capping” of mushroom compost over the top of the horse manure in the poly tunnel please?
About 1cm / half inch. It's not a weed-free capping as such because the horse manure heap was hot enough at 55-60C, to kill weed seeds.
Thank you Charles :)
Hi Charles. Perfect timing as I was wondering same. What other plants can I plant between rows or garlic?
I have 7 varieties of garlic soft and hardneck so the beds will start freeing up mid of June through July
Cool, and anything you want to transplant now, except cucurbits!
Good to know. Thank you!
Can you mix root crops (swede, cabbage or Brussel sprouts) with beetroot or tomatoes before they are finished
Yes anything goes in healthy soil, if enough moisture
Hello Charles
The garlic you grow in rows outside your greenhouse; how close together do you plant the cloves please?
Trying to plan for when I plant my next batch in the Autumn!
Thanks in advance, best wishes, Denise
Hi Denise, roughly 30cm rows and 10cm between garlic.
@@CharlesDowding1nodig thank you so much for taking the time to reply. All helps with my planning 😀
🙂
I live in an area with wild temp and moisture swings in the Spring time. Two weeks ago we were getting frost on the cars and now day time highs are in the 90s.....two weeks from now, we will be back to low 60s or high 50s for the high. Am I better off waiting until temps stabilize to grow things like Radish and Carrot? Or just waiting until fall? Our summers are dry and hot until September. After that it's a crap shoot.
Oooh you have a difficult climate and I would so those in April as soon as the ground has thawed and then again in July for carrots, September for radish as long as you can keep the seeds moist
Apa kabar Bapak, lama saya tidak melihat video anda, saya harap anda dan keluarga anda selalu sehat dan tetap bersemangat berkebun..salam hangat dari saya..🙏
Terima kasih, senang mendengarnya dan ya kami semua baik-baik saja, saya harap begitu
To get straight lines do you use string line for everything like square areas and planting out..
Would be good to see a maintenance video
No string, just my dibber as in this video ruclips.net/user/shortsDdxzxOVfI4M?feature=share