What a pizza good fortune!

3 min read

KITCHEN GARDENERKITCHEN GARDENER

Helping you get your best-ever fruit and vegHelping you get your best-ever fruit and veg

I love my new planters – see if you can get your hands on something similar

It pays to sow lettuce regularly

I’m potting up a few micro tomato plants in the little greenhouse and was given a couple of commercial pizza sauce tins which I thought could look good if upcycled as planters. After drilling a few drainage holes in the base and adding a layer of gravel, I’ve used them as you would any plant pot, with a tomato plant in each and another layer of gravel on top to help preserve moisture. ’m potting up a few micro tomato plants in the little greenhouse and was given a couple of commercial pizza sauce tins which I thought could look good if upcycled as planters. After drilling a few drainage holes in the base and adding a layer of gravel, I’ve used them as you would any plant pot, with a tomato plant in each and another layer of gravel on top to help preserve moisture.

Why not ask at your local pizza restaurant for any used cans? I’m sure they’ll be happy to give them away and they’re perfect not only for tomatoes, but basil as well!

Over the last few months, I’ve been glad most of my veg are grown in raised beds, especially with so much standing water over the winter and early spring. Afew friends on my old allotment have lost most of their overwintered brassicas due to them drowning or rotting.

I’m continuing to harvest ‘Sapporo’ cauliflowers, which have been under an enviromesh cage, but while the crops look good, the netting has started to turn green due to algae and all the wet weather. Once the final brassicas are removed, I’ll see if I can clean the material with the hose, or even the jet wash, to give it a new lease of life.

The lettuce seedlings I started a few weeks ago are being transplanted into the garden under wire cloches. This is because the curious blackbirds love to flick the small plants from the ground if they can, so by covering them with a cloche it gives them time to root and hold their own. While some go out, I’m sowing more, as it’s a constant cycle with lettuce to produce fresh leaves all year; adopt a ‘plant one, sow one’ approach, with modules, pots and even old guttering working well to produce cut-and-come-again leaves. The seedlings may look close, but this allows for several harvests from the plants. If you want to produce full heads of lettuce, space them out more to allow them to grow to maturity. I’m

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