That is actually my next job.And connect the gutters on the shed to a water butt for watering the plants in the raised bed.
That is actually my next job.And connect the gutters on the shed to a water butt for watering the plants in the raised bed.
We should start a landscaping advisory serviceAnd connect the gutters on the shed to a water butt for watering the plants in the raised bed.

I'd plant a couple of minni tomatoes too. I do them in hanging baskets(which you could hang off the shed on a bracket. Also a few strawberry plants along the front edge would be rather nice.Got a raised bed for a small ’kitchen garden’, my lone rosemary and thyme shrubs are getting overused so time to expand.
Chives, rosemary, fennel, thyme, bay and 6 elephant garlics. Going to put some chillies in some time within the next month.
Mixture of bed/potting compost and mature manure. Hoping that’s alright and not too rich, will find out soon I suppose.
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Finally remembered to get some pics of what I've got growing so far.
My veg growing areas are rather limited to some raised beds squeezed around where SWMBO has flower beds but I've got 4 raised beds dedicated to fruit and veg.
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I've got sugar snap peas, beetroot, broccoli, some carrots and potatoes and a load of strawberries, some blueberries, raspberries and rhubarb. Theres a couple of sweetcorn growing in pots and a random cucumber plant that I shoved in a corner on the off chance it'd grow.
It's not a LOT but it is nice to be growing things. The last time we grew sugar snaps my kids treated them like sweets and would "sneak" some as a little treat.
ATB
Andy




"
It's not a LOT but it is nice to be growing things"
THIS
This is the most important part I think , Not many of us have enough outdoor space to be able to dedicate it to a growing area ( although its still impressive to see what can be grown in a limited space- vertical growing ) so whatever we do grow is more a token presence of what we need.
But the growing process itself is the learning and enjoyment aspect - and understanding how and when certain things need to be sown, planted out , harvested , how they can feed one at various times of the year .
I'm not sure where to post this, it could go into a foraging thread. Anyway, as we're growing them for food here's a few pics of our bamboo.
New years shoots:
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A shoot ready to eat:
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Shoot trimmed with the edible stem left:
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And finally the shoot cut and boiled for a few minutes and ready to eat. I gather they can be bitter and the boiling reduces this but the plants I chose produce shoots ideal for eating and I've not found them that bitter. They're actually rather nice, if a little plain.
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Interesting option to pursue - It is as I understand it , a prolific grower ( and spreader ) so any idea on the calorie return ? I imagine its fairly full of fibre?