phil.p":23dmlval said:
I found the best way to minimise blight was to absolutely saturate everything from roof down once every two or three weeks, then open windows and allow the air and ground surface to dry.
Do you mean just watering and not spraying with copper-based anything? If so, it would be wonderful for us, but we don't even have room for a cold frame, never mind a greenhouse.
The biggest problem I think we have with the growbag is that the stand has very little support for the growing trusses presently. I put an extra-heavy rail at the back to take holes for canes or whatever, but never finished it (the "customer" was getting antsy about the time it was taking). I think this winter I'll finish that bit so there's a good frame for support for next year.
I grew "Shirley"s one year and had a four and a half pound truss.
Smug person!
Seriously, it still amazes me how productive a really small plot can be. I can't claim any credit for that, except making the compost bins. I drink a lot of coffee, and the grounds, plus grass cuttings, kitchen "waste" and clippings generally seem to compost really well. If you count the compost as productive use, we have almost no food waste at all.
I have some difficulty understanding the keen gardener opposite us, who puts out her big green wheelie-bin for the dustman every fortnight, usually full of mowings etc. What a waste! And I'd guess she has to add-back a lot of nitrogen, etc. On Thursday last, I even saw a commercial firm park their van outside and whip round the lawn (not much bigger than ours) with a sprayer, which I assume was fertilizer (that lawn has no visible weeds!). It does look nice, but it reminds me vaguely of buying furniture from Ikea* - quick and easy, but you know deep down it's not "right".
E.
*guilty secret I guess - have kids, need cheap, disposable furnishings, at least for a while.