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Growing Your Own Fruits & Vegetables

With the recent rise in the costs of groceries, many households are looking to grow their own fruit and vegetables to save them money. The good news with this is you don’t need a huge garden to grow your own crops. 

Think like a Crop Farmer

Our first piece of advice is to think like a farmer. Look at what space you have and consider your soil. If your soil is full of clay then trying to grow a crop like carrots, potatoes or parsnips who prefer a sandy, free draining soil.  Equally, a sandy soil is not ideal for growing brassicas, beans and lettuces. Now you have looked at your soil, also think about the weather where you live. If you live in the North of England or Scotland, crops like peaches, tomatoes, courgettes and cucumbers are a challenge to grow outside, but much easier to grow in the milder temperatures of the South of England.

Next, think about space. If you only have a small yard, an apple tree is impractical, as is pumpkin or squash; but herbs, spring onions, salad leaves, radishes, potatoes and even some berry plants can easily be grown in containers quite easily. A final consideration is what you and your family like. If no one likes courgettes then it would make no sense in growing them! Perhaps as a side note – also consider how harvested crops should be stored. If you aren’t going to get through all of a certain fruit or vegetable then don’t be afraid to offer them out to friends and family, rather than let them go bad, or worse, don’t pick them which can lead to bolting and the plant flowering.

All Year Round Fruits & Vegetables

If you would like to harvest fruits and vegetables all year round, this is possible, but you may need a spacious windowsill or a greenhouse for the winter months. 

Staggered sowing will help with certain quick growing vegetables like lettuces, French beans, peas, spinach, carrots and parsnips as it means you will have a small amount of crops to harvest more often. 

Looking at your sowing and harvesting times also helps you plan what you can harvest and when – then work backwards from there for sowing. There are many crops that are ready from summer through to autumn, but some crops are not winter hardy. Vegetables like broccoli, Brussels sprouts, parsnips, leeks, turnips and cabbages usually cope with winter frosts (some actually taste better after a little frost!) and can be harvested right through until spring. 

If you look back historically at when we used to ‘eat with the seasons’, this will give you a good idea of what should be ripe for picking, and when.

Easiest to Grow

If you are a beginner or slightly wary of growing your own, then perhaps start with easy fruits and vegetables. Salad leaves and tomatoes are simple to grow – sow the seeds into a propagator tray of moist compost and leave them on a sunny windowsill to grow, watering occasionally. Radishes, beans and peas are easy to grow outside, just sow the seeds into a container or the ground and they’ll be ready in just under a month (remember to support your peas and beans as they are climbing plants). Alternatively, why not try onions, garlic or potatoes? Spring onions can be ready in a couple of months, onions and garlic towards the end of summer if sown inside between February and April and planted outside in May, and seed potatoes can be planted outside from mid-March onwards (remember to use frost fleece to protect them from any last frosts) and will be ready to harvest from June onwards.

There are also a variety of easy fruits to grow. Strawberries are wonderful fruits that are extremely popular and expensive in shops so worthwhile growing your own. They can come back year after year and provided they are looked after, will produce a good yield of tasty fruits right through until early autumn, depending on the variety. Blueberries are another fruit that is easy to grow. Ideally grown in containers, blueberry plants pollinate best when placed next to another variety. They will keep producing fruit from mid-summer onwards. Other berry and currant fruits such as blackberries, loganberries, gooseberries, blackcurrants, redcurrants or white currants are also easy to grow and need minimal care – this is where you can go slightly obscure if you like and find different berry bushes that appeal to you as there are many that can be grown in the UK. Just make sure you protect them from birds if required and water once a week during dry weather.

What Do I Need to Grow My Own?

We have curated special grow your own kits so you don’t have to, which contain everything you need to get your plants growing. These include a variety of different items depending on the seeds to grow and are based on the month you need to sow them. 

For each month, we have a choice of a Propagator Growing Kits with a wide range of options. Fruit and vegetable seeds vary but include three packs of seeds suitable for growing each month. Alternatively, you can buy your seed packets from us individually, select a Seed Tray, if required, add a bag of our All-purpose Compost and choose from a range of Fertilisers suitable for the crops you are growing. 

We also have a huge range of Plant Pots that are suitable for container growing if you are not growing in the ground. Now all you have left to do is wait for your delights to grow and enjoy the fruits of your labour!

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About Elixir Gardens

With over 35 years’ experience in Gardening and Horticulture here at Elixir Garden Supplies we pride ourselves on offering quality gardening essentials with the knowledge of how to use them and sold at the best possible prices.

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