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Gardening Advice

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  • MrLargo said:
    Some very impressive flora on display on here! 

    Need a bit of advice. I've recently moved into a new house. Back garden hardly gets any sun,  but I'm not ready to tackle that yet. At the front, I've got a raised bed that gets lots of sun. My neighbour has got all sorts of colourful flowers growing, she said she grows tomatoes there as well, so seems to be a  very good spot for growing things. I've cleared my bed, which has been untended for years, and mixed into the soil some organic matter that Nunhead garden centre recommended to me a few weeks ago. 

    I'm on holiday now, but before I went away, I sowed a few sunflower seeds, plus hollyhocks, lupins and foxgloves. I've grown sunflowers before, pretty easy. For the others, the instructions on the seed packets said I should grow them in a seed box and then transplant the seedlings. I've ignored that and planted them straight into the soil in my raised bed. 

    It's ten years since I last had a garden, but I'm sure I did this before and got away with it. Is there a specific reason they recommend planting in a seed box first? Presumably they grow naturally in the countryside and so on, without going through this process. What's the consequence of planting them straight into the ground? When I return on 7 May, am I likely to see any growth, or have I planted a load of seeds that are never going to do anything. 

    Grateful for any advice from the multiple experts on here.

    Your issue is that they will grow too close to to each other if they take off and you’ll have to thin them out pretty drastically. Holly hocks, lupins and foxgloves take up a lot of space when they mature and you’ll only need a couple of each to fill a fair sized bed. Not a major problem though so long as you’re prepared to be brutal if they all germinate. 
  • MrLargo said:
    Some very impressive flora on display on here! 

    Need a bit of advice. I've recently moved into a new house. Back garden hardly gets any sun,  but I'm not ready to tackle that yet. At the front, I've got a raised bed that gets lots of sun. My neighbour has got all sorts of colourful flowers growing, she said she grows tomatoes there as well, so seems to be a  very good spot for growing things. I've cleared my bed, which has been untended for years, and mixed into the soil some organic matter that Nunhead garden centre recommended to me a few weeks ago. 

    I'm on holiday now, but before I went away, I sowed a few sunflower seeds, plus hollyhocks, lupins and foxgloves. I've grown sunflowers before, pretty easy. For the others, the instructions on the seed packets said I should grow them in a seed box and then transplant the seedlings. I've ignored that and planted them straight into the soil in my raised bed. 

    It's ten years since I last had a garden, but I'm sure I did this before and got away with it. Is there a specific reason they recommend planting in a seed box first? Presumably they grow naturally in the countryside and so on, without going through this process. What's the consequence of planting them straight into the ground? When I return on 7 May, am I likely to see any growth, or have I planted a load of seeds that are never going to do anything. 

    Grateful for any advice from the multiple experts on here.

    Your issue is that they will grow too close to to each other if they take off and you’ll have to thin them out pretty drastically. Holly hocks, lupins and foxgloves take up a lot of space when they mature and you’ll only need a couple of each to fill a fair sized bed. Not a major problem though so long as you’re prepared to be brutal if they all germinate. 
    Makes sense. Thanks for explaining. 👍
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