First post

I’ve started this blog because of the glazed expression I notice in people’s eyes whenever I talk about my latest obsession: growing vegetables in containers.  So I thought, why not create a blog, which will be read by random people on the Internet who are actually interested in the subject?

This is my second year of container vegetable growing, and I’ve learned massive amounts (and made plenty of mistakes as well).  It all started back in late 2007, when I joined a local community allotment project.  For various reasons which I won’t go into, I’m not volunteering at the project any more, and I decided not to get a private allotment either.  (Logistically speaking, allotments are a pretty tricky thing when you don’t drive or have a bike, and don’t want to buy a whole new set of tools for said allotment, or a lockable shed to keep them in…)

So that left one option: grow stuff in my back garden.  It’s a tiny, triangular patch with a couple of raised beds and paving everywhere else.  This means that allotment-style rows of onions, potatoes etc. are out of the question.  But it’s big enough – with the addition of things like shelving and hanging baskets, plus a “table” made from an old door – to house quite a few containers.   And there’s a little paved patch in our front garden, which gets a lot of sun and is hence ideal for container growing.  Plus it also gets fewer snails than the back garden, which is why I’ve put runner beans there rather than in the back.  (If you don’t want to use slug pellets, then the easiest way to prevent snail damage is to grow your stuff where the snails aren’t so prevalent.  None of the so called “eco friendly” ways to banish snails have ever worked for me.   Beer in a saucer?  Nah.  The snails in my back garden just go “cheers, mate!”, drink the beer and *then* chomp on my pak choi.  Smear of Vaseline around the outside of your pots?  Doesn’t work – I think our snails must use parachutes.)   At one stage, I even erected a small “tent” (made from a very fine gauge net curtain and some bamboo canes) around a particularly sensitive container crop.  This did actually work, but it was a huge faff dismantling and re-erecting the tent every time you wanted to pick a couple of leaves.  Sometimes it just isn’t worth it.

Who said shelving had to be for indoors only?