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Old 13-11-2011, 09:51 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Dave Hill Dave Hill is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Feb 2007
Location: South Wales
Posts: 2,409
Default Greenhouse Chillies

On Nov 13, 9:41*pm, "Bob Hobden" wrote:
JonH wrote





The chilli plants were dying back with mildew at some of their
extremities.


Even so a couple were still in flower. *A couple of fruits had been
attacked from the top and were being internally devoured by some sort
of creature. *The greens are unlikely to ripen to red now.


SO I stripped the crop of the remaining fruits and turfed the plants
out. I can now weed (or weedkill) the soil in my my greenhouse.


I am planning Nagas and Okra next year, starting off early in a heated
propagator in my conservatory, then out to the greenhouse.


In open soil, the Laurtrec Wight garlics have been showing, as have
been the Senshu Yellow Onions. *The latter being outside 'the cage'
have variously been knocked over by the foxes. Illegitimi.


We had one meal off the surviving French Beans. *Must plant earlier
next year. *Probably inside the cage.


Butternut Squashes are off the planting menu for next year. *They take
up far too much space... and they are not to my taste.


We finally pulled up our Chilli plants out on out allotment today, they were
under large cloches (£19.99 Wyvales). Got the best crop of red chillies ever
this year such that even our Asian neighbours got bags of red ones as well
as the remaining green ones. Trouble is the men of the households complain
that the "Thai Dragon" are too hot, the "Inferno" should be more to their
taste. Is it general that women can take a curry hotter than men? Certainly
true in our household too.
Never had anything eat our chillies unless they were touching the ground.
Nagas and Ockra especially demand a lot of sun and a long summer, hope you
do well.

As far as Garlic is concerned we have found anything with "Wight" in the
name does not grow well for us, probably because we are on acid soil whereas
the Isle of Wight is mainly chalk. Thermidrome and Germidour are our two
favourites.

Don't bother with overwintering onions, lose too many to the weather to make
it worthwhile and they are only a couple of weeks before the spring planted
and don't store well either. Not much going for them IMO.

Pulled up our beans some weeks ago, got all we want of the French Beans in
the freezer and we don't bother freezing Runners, horrid when frozen IMO.

We like roasted Butternut Squash though, roasted with some red onions we
have it as a side dish at Christmas and everyone loves it. Use with onions,
French beans, asparagus and peppers in a roasted veg combination it's rather
good too with anything and you can forget the spuds.

--
Regards
Bob Hobden
Posting to this Newsgroup
from the W.of London. UK- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


What about Scotish garlic Bob
http://www.reallygarlicky.co.uk/