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#1
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Horticultural mouses!
Not only have the mice been in the kitchen and have eaten all my
spaghetti squash seeds ... the damned things have 'planted' them in all the plant pots along the kitchen window! My fuschia cutting that was doing so well (about 12" tall now! No idea what it came off, probably never will know now!) is sharing its 6" pot with 12 squash plants!! I wonder if the chickens will eat spaghetti squash plants ... (it's a damned shame, cos I'm not going to have any seeds to plant in Feb, but I don't think I can keep the plants growing till it's safe to put them out!) |
#2
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Horticultural mouses!
Not only have the mice been in the kitchen and have eaten all my spaghetti squash seeds ... the damned things have 'planted' them in all the plant pots along the kitchen window! My fuschia cutting that was doing so well (about 12" tall now! No idea what it came off, probably never will know now!) is sharing its 6" pot with 12 squash plants!! I wonder if the chickens will eat spaghetti squash plants ... (it's a damned shame, cos I'm not going to have any seeds to plant in Feb, but I don't think I can keep the plants growing till it's safe to put them out!) You plant them in February? How do you keep them warm and with enough space until June when you can plant them out? -- Regards Bob Hobden |
#3
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Horticultural mouses!
Bob Hobden wrote:
(it's a damned shame, cos I'm not going to have any seeds to plant in Feb, but I don't think I can keep the plants growing till it's safe to put them out!) You plant them in February? How do you keep them warm and with enough space until June when you can plant them out? I think I plant my first batch of courgettes and squashes in Feb, yes. I could be mis-remembering. They go in pots on the window sill, then out into the greenhouse. Iirc, they get planted out in about April. Of course, this could be why I tend to lose a lot of them. :-/ (but normally to snails, and from planting them out when they are too small, rather than from frost!) |
#4
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Horticultural mouses!
wrote in message ... Bob Hobden wrote: (it's a damned shame, cos I'm not going to have any seeds to plant in Feb, but I don't think I can keep the plants growing till it's safe to put them out!) You plant them in February? How do you keep them warm and with enough space until June when you can plant them out? I think I plant my first batch of courgettes and squashes in Feb, yes. I could be mis-remembering. They go in pots on the window sill, then out into the greenhouse. Iirc, they get planted out in about April. Of course, this could be why I tend to lose a lot of them. :-/ (but normally to snails, and from planting them out when they are too small, rather than from frost!) Crikey! Here in N. Wilts I don't even start mine in seed trays in the greenhouse until late May. They always catch up anyway, and we have had 140 lbs of winter squash this year, and about 20 lbs of pumpkins and marrows and other earlier perishers. Being short of storage space, I have to store the winter squashes on newspaper on the floor under the dining room table, so no dinner parties until next spring. someone |
#5
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Horticultural mouses!
"someone" wrote wrote in message ... Bob Hobden wrote: (it's a damned shame, cos I'm not going to have any seeds to plant in Feb, but I don't think I can keep the plants growing till it's safe to put them out!) You plant them in February? How do you keep them warm and with enough space until June when you can plant them out? I think I plant my first batch of courgettes and squashes in Feb, yes. I could be mis-remembering. They go in pots on the window sill, then out into the greenhouse. Iirc, they get planted out in about April. Of course, this could be why I tend to lose a lot of them. :-/ (but normally to snails, and from planting them out when they are too small, rather than from frost!) Crikey! Here in N. Wilts I don't even start mine in seed trays in the greenhouse until late May. They always catch up anyway, and we have had 140 lbs of winter squash this year, and about 20 lbs of pumpkins and marrows and other earlier perishers. Being short of storage space, I have to store the winter squashes on newspaper on the floor under the dining room table, so no dinner parties until next spring. That's what I thought, we start ours about the same time, end of April beginning of May and they are still a bit big by the time we plant out some years (Chelsea time) -- Regards Bob Hobden W.of London. |
#6
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Horticultural mouses!
Bob Hobden wrote:
Not only have the mice been in the kitchen and have eaten all my spaghetti squash seeds ... the damned things have 'planted' them in all the plant pots along the kitchen window! My fuschia cutting that was doing so well (about 12" tall now! No idea what it came off, probably never will know now!) is sharing its 6" pot with 12 squash plants!! I wonder if the chickens will eat spaghetti squash plants ... (it's a damned shame, cos I'm not going to have any seeds to plant in Feb, but I don't think I can keep the plants growing till it's safe to put them out!) You plant them in February? How do you keep them warm and with enough space until June when you can plant them out? I picked several squashes in the 'greenhouse' yesterday. I shall be planting cucumbers there in March. -- Rusty |
#7
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Horticultural mouses!
someone wrote:
/snip/ Crikey! Here in N. Wilts I don't even start mine in seed trays in the greenhouse until late May. They always catch up anyway, and we have had 140 lbs of winter squash this year, and about 20 lbs of pumpkins and marrows and other earlier perishers. Being short of storage space, I have to store the winter squashes on newspaper on the floor under the dining room table, so no dinner parties until next spring. Get some of those net carrot/onion sacks from a greengrocer and hang the squashes &c up in them. -- Rusty |
#8
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Horticultural mouses!
Rusty Hinge wrote:
I picked several squashes in the 'greenhouse' yesterday. I shall be planting cucumbers there in March. Why is greenhouse quoted? (Is it blue?) I picked a couple of pound of tomatoes in the unheated greenhouse number 2 yesterday. (Greenhouse number 1, which is ours as opposed to our neighbour's stopped producing a month or so back, and has now had most of the plants removed and fed to the chickens) |
#9
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Horticultural mouses!
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#10
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Horticultural mouses!
Rusty Hinge wrote:
Why is greenhouse quoted? (Is it blue?) 'Greenhouse' is a mish-mash of sheets of corrugated PVC, offcuts of polycarbonate Twinwall, and agricultural polythene, leaning-to against the part-finished garage and the workshop in the angle these two buildings enclose. It's more like a conservatory, really. Ah, I see. Heh. We have one crappy greenhouse, and we are squatting in our neighbours' much better greenhouse cos she doesn't use it any more other than to over winter her geraniums. It's a win-win - we get to grow tomatoes melons and peppers in a huge space, she gets our surplus crop as a 'thank you'. :-) |
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