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Best position for a vegetable patch
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from Frogleg contains these words: On Wed, 17 Mar 2004 17:08:26 GMT, Janet Baraclough.. wrote: from Frogleg contains these words: On Tue, 16 Mar 2004 17:28:02 GMT, Janet Baraclough.. wrote: LOL. Have you visited the northern half of the UK, Frogleg? :-) No. Just London. However, because it's darker there in winter, there'll be *more* sun in summer, no? No :-) If only! I do stand by my advice -- the more sun, the better. Depends what you're growing and at what latitude. Jo is in France; further south and warmer than the UK with less cloud cover, more sun, and more intense light. In some circumstances, afternoon shade and wind shelter could be preferable. Hot afternoon sun and wind together is fine for herbs, maquis and coastal plants with narrow/ hard/ silvery leaves etc but can be a deadly combination for plants with large soft green leaves like tomatoes, lettuce, beans or potatoes. I'm going to have to draw some diagrams for myself. :-) I know that the further north you (in the northern hemisphere), the longer the summer day is. It may be true that the sunlight is less intense, however. In midsummer we get nearly 23 hours of daylight, but it's nothing like the brilliant high-intensity light nearer the Equator...cloudy skies are a common feature of north UK summers. They certainly grow veg, incl. tomatoes in Fairbanks, which is approx. 65N. There's a big difference between continental climate and the UK's maritime one. Janet. |
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