Great video, I'm a little envious of your poly crub, looks like such a great place to grow and extend the season. Also just somewhere to hang on rainy, chilly days. Your compost bins are doubling as an agility course for Maggie. 😅
thank you for sharing your peaceful, calming garden with your followers...nice to see the Mag-ster bopping around the garden...the greenhouse always shines so lovely after your cleansing...i remember the video when you first cleaned that greenhouse years ago...have a beautiful week
Your garden is lovely even in the throes of Fall. Mine is about done here too. My tomatoes and cucumbers are still producing. I have onions, melons, winter squash, pears, and pumpkins still going but I am ready for the great clean up. Tuesday and Wednesday we are to have temperatures in the mid 80’s and that will be the last hot hurrah. Then back to more seasonal temperatures until frost sneaks up on us. We are supposed to have a cool, rainy summer next year so I’m considering that in my future garden plans. Have a wonderful week! TeresaSue
I like to heavily prune the bases of my summer crops and then sow or plant my winter crops around them. Then as the summer crop deteriorates, I just snip them to ground level, remove the tops, then the roots can become food for my new crops.
Hello TLG . Well another season comes and goes.Time stands still for no one . I did manage to get a small harvest of Tomatoes after what was for the most part a cold wet overcast so called summer . Ah well!!! Onwards and upwards. Soon be Christmas and all that brings.
8.45 look to your left from the cauliflower beds, you'll find her in a pot. Sweet sweet Maggie!! Sorry Tanya, i,m distracted again by your lovely furball.
@@janekoebele3271 So do I :) They do occasionally get in trouble with me for weeing in the beds, but mostly, they leave them alone once crops/plants are in. Maggie, in particular, prefers doing her business outdoors than in the litter tray. Fortunately, she goes in the grass rather than the beds, though.
One question, Tanya - how do you get coriander to grow so tall and so bushy? We are lucky to get plants to grow even a foot tall, by which time they have already run to seed.
Hi Alasdair, Aside from loving rich soil and moisture, coriander thrives in warmth and places protected from wind. The ones in the greenhouse get this while the coriander I grow outside doesn't. That's why it's so big. The plants I grow outside are more modest in size.
@@ando5899 The placement, size, and design of the Polycrub mean that it stays warmer for longer. Notice the shrubs around the greenhouse-they block light. Single-paned glass also loses heat quicker than the double-walled plastic sheeting that the Polycrub is made of. Lastly, moist soil absorbs warmth and radiates it out at night. The large raised beds in the Polycrub help keep the interior warmer for longer.