Hi all,
Please have a read of my jobs to do and getting ready for the growing season.
Enjoy
Willie
Vegetable
& Fruit March Growing Guide
March is the month when things really start to move in
the growing season. In fact the start of the year used to be, 25th March until
1752 in Ireland when we adopted the Gregorian calendar and started our year on
the 1st January. From a horticultural viewpoint, it would have made sense to
have stuck with the old system, starting the year on the spring equinox, in
link with the seasons
Comfrey Blocking 14 the
most useful herb you can grow on your plot.
Sowing
& Planting in March on the Vegetable Plot
If the weather is cold but
otherwise reasonable, you can steal some time and start early by cloching and
fleecing, although cloches have been around for many years, nowadays we can get
cheap polythene tunnel cloches and even cheaper fleece.Place
the cloche or fleece a week or two before planting and the soil will have
warmed up nicely as well as being dry and easy to work. Water well into the
drill prior to sowing and replacing the cloche. Do remember to water weekly or
more frequently in sunny weather under cloches.
To hold down fleece without tearing, save plastic 2
litre milk containers and fill with sand or water although water tends to leak.
The smooth surface will weigh down the fleece but not damage it. It's
surprising how just a layer of fleece can raise the temperature of the
underlying soil.Plant out your onion
and shallot sets. If growing onions from seed started earlier in the year under
cover these can also go out now. You can also direct sow onions, thinning to
the eventual spacing. Cloching will help them establish and also stop pigeons
from pulling them up.
March is the right time to establish an asparagus
bed if you are starting from crowns. Do make sure you get it in the right
position as it will be there permanently.
Mid-March should let you start planting out those
potatoes you've had chitting. If you want some really early potatoes, start
some in a black polythene sack in the greenhouse or tunnel. Punch drainage
holes in the sack and use a multi-purpose compost.
Staying with root crops, you can plant Jerusalem
artichoke tubers now. Be aware that getting them all up at harvest time is very
difficult and any tubers left in the ground will grow so effectively a
permanent bed.
Things to Sow
Beetroot
Broad Beans
Early Peas (but they
may do best started in a gutter in the greenhouse then slipped into a trench or
in seed trays)
Brussels sprouts –
early varieties like Peer Gynt will be ready in September
Kohl Rabi
Leeks
Lettuce
Radish
Parsnips
Spinach Beet
Early Turnips
Under Cover in Greenhouse, Coldframe and
Polytunnel
Sow in Heat
Windowsill or a propagator in the greenhouse will
come into use now to start off your tomatoes, peppers, aubergines and cucumbers.
Under Cloche
Many of the crops you can sow directly will also
benefit from cloching, especially as you move northwards or started off in
modules in a cool greenhouse or coldframe and then planted out later.
Fruit
Planting & Pruning
There is still time to finish planting bare rooted
fruit trees and bushes, especially raspberries and other cane fruits.
Early this month you can still prune apple and pear
trees while they are still dormant. There is also time to prune gooseberries
and currants. With currants shorten the side shoots to just one bud and remove
old stems from the centre of the bushes.
They'll benefit from some compost spread
around the base as well or some general purpose fertiliser. Trees will
appreciate some wood ash spreading under them.
Harvest
Any leeks left standing should come up now – you can
freeze them for use in soups and stews or make concentrated leek & potato
soup to freeze and thin out when used.
Parsnips too should come up in early March before
they try and re-grow. They'll store for a month or so in damp sand but the
plant knows it is growing time again. If you turn them into a mash, perhaps
with carrots, they'll freeze well taking up little room
You may have spinach beet and chards available, the
last of the late Brussels sprouts, winter cauliflowers, kale, swedes, salsify
and scorzonera.
Don't forget to keep checking the purple sprouting!
General Jobs on the Plot
Have a good tidy up and finish those odd
construction jobs because you are going to be busier still later in the year!www.dublincommunitygrowers.ie
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