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September Tour - vegetable's sweetness| Edging| Rhubarb and composting| Charles Dowding

Charles Dowding 98,377 1 year ago
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September Tour - vegetable's sweetness| Edging| Rhubarb and composting| Charles Dowding Harvests, so many! Helped by the no dig abundance with soil in a very fertile state. I'm growing almost every vegetable which is possible and viable in the climate here, so that's a wide range. It's a temperate oceanic climate with daytime temperatures this September averaging 22°C 72°F by day 13°C 55°F by night, September has been as warm as any summer month. And with rainfall of 72mm or 2.9in. The sugar test we do at the beginning is with a portable refractometer. If you put those two words in 'search' you should find options for purchasing one. It's a fun device and an easy way to discover more about what you are growing. 00:00 Introduction - I show some harvests in my conservatory 00:18 Celery harvested too late 00:49 Chicory for radicchio, used in my salad bags 01:16 Cabbages and cauliflower 01:44 Onions, garlic and squash – all stored in the house 02:02 Loofahs 02:24 Seed from French Marigolds grown in the polytunnel 02:36 Garlic ‘seed’ (cloves) 02:55 Dry beans – borlotti and Czar 03:31 Sweetness of harvest – I demonstrate using a portable refractometer to measure the sweetness of beetroot 04:56 More results – apples, tomatoes, carrots, tomatillos and garlic 07:10 In the garden – chicory for radicchio and cauliflower 08:08 Tomatoes in the polytunnel with some late blight on the leaves, and some new plantings of chard and kale 09:41 Cucumbers and loofahs, and I cut open a watermelon 11:40 Winter radish outside, Bora variety 12:25 How we manage edging 13:14 Jerusalem artichoke 13:31 Chervil interplanted between lettuce 14:10 Kale and cavolo nero, and asparagus 14:59 Rhubarb 15:58 Pure wood chip on a bed 16:24 Two types of beetroot – a red stemmed variety, and Cheltenham Green Top 17:03 Lettuce just harvested, and broccoli 18:14 A slug, and how to manage them 18:36 Nantes carrots, and some info on carrot root fly 19:28 Cover crop of mustard, and plantings of rye – a trial against wireworm 20:30 Spinach 21:06 Deer damage to chicory and endive 21:48 Onion seeds in the shed, and squash 23:00 Compost in pallet bays 23:10 A bed of squash, some just harvested, and how to know when they’re ripe 24:17 Chicory and endive – different ways of harvesting 25:08 Bed with cleared Borlotti beans, and garlic now planted with compost over – a comparison of compost of different ages 25:26 A caterpillar on a cabbage, which has been sprayed with Bacillus thuringiensis 26:56 Compost in my 7-bay system – adding green and brown 29:43 Outro Link for the copper tools https://implementations.co.uk The recommended seeds are from https://tamarorganics.co.uk/product-category/vegetable-varieties. My how to save seed video https://youtu.be/bHFg6ZEsMCw For those in Europe I recommend this excellent seed company who save most of their own seeds https://www.bingenheimersaatgut.de Filmed 28th September by Nicola Smith at Homeacres no dig garden in Somerset, UK. Nicola apologises for exporting the file SD rather than HD. It's fine for watching on smaller screens. For growth and planting comparisons, see my August tour one month before this https://youtu.be/LwaRMcWKOcY You can join this channel by paying a monthly fee, to support our work with helping gardeners grow better, and to receive monthly videos made only for members: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCB1J6siDdmhwah7q0O2WJBg/join #nodig #growyourownfood #marketgarden #growyourownveggies #nodiggardening

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