Growing, Squashes, tomatoes and grapes!

How to grow squashes, How to grow your own food. How to grow food in a mall garden. Gardening education. Learning how to grow your own food. Growing your own produce. Gardening. Backyard gardening. Growing food in your backyard. How to grow food in the backyard. How to garden. How to grow food in containers. How to grow food in a small garden. How to grow food if you don’t have a big garden. Growing your own food at home. Smallholding. Creating your own small holding. Homesteading. Growing food on a small homestead. Growing your own vegetables. Gardening ideas. Vegetable garden ideas. Ideas for a small vegetable garden. How to grow your own produce. Gardening at home. Learning how to be self sufficiency. I hope people enjoy the video.

August UK gardening. What to plant, grow and sow in August and September. What to grow in August. These great vegetable seeds are great to sow in August and September. Kale, Spinach and Chard. Crops to grow into Autumn and Winter. Learn how to garden at home. Growing food at home. Learning how to grow food at home. Cold hardy vegetables to grow for Autumn and Winter. Backyard gardening. Growing food in the backyard. Autumn and Winter hardy vegetables. Cold climate crops. Growing food in a cold climate. Food crops to set for Winter. Self sufficiency. Backyard food growing. Seed sowing tutorial. Hardy crops for a cold climate. How to grow your own food in Autumn and Winter. I hope people enjoy the video. Gardening education. I hope people enjoy the video.

Growing, Squashes, tomatoes and grapes!

| Gardening Education | 17 Comments
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17 Comments

  • Rebecca Kirkham
    Reply

    Hey Dan…..
    Wowser, you are not wrong…..the squash are looking splendid!!!! i imagine that they will taste great. I just dont know what is wrong with mine!!!!!!!!!!!! xxx

  • Velo-Pro International
    Reply

    I live in Madrid and have a generous terrace but no yard. I've got a couple potted tomato plants that are looking good, squash would be great if confined.

  • Homebird Farm - UK
    Reply

    I'm hoping to have a better year next year with the pumpkins and squash. I've still not got any fruit on the butternut squash in my garden. Yours look fab though!

  • Shavenhamster
    Reply

    Wait for the stork to go woody/corky like and less green that way you know they will keep through the winter months dan, unless you plan on eating straight away but its better to cure them and let the sugars form. I got a feeling the yellow ones will ripen to a reddish orange colour as the sugars build up this you will start to notice perhaps by late September early October.

  • augnkn93043
    Reply

    How are your lakemont seedless growing? I bought some based on your recommendation a year or so ago and now have a huge amount of grapes about pea size? perhaps I should have thinned them out some more. looking forward to seeing how yours have grown.

  • All Thing's Green
    Reply

    Looking good, I put our pumpkin in the ground it was struggling in the pot it was in, the male flowers were not opening in time for the females, but now its in the ground and in full sun it has set two fruit .

  • VeganMacFeegle
    Reply

    I am very envious of your squash plants, mine have been struggling and I am not sure I will even get some fruit at this rate. Your ideas for next year sound interesting, I will enjoy seeing what you grow!

  • Rebecca Kirkham
    Reply

    Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhh thats better, beard is back!!!!!
    I am growing leaf beet too, delicious and fresh for the cold months. I have put some Sutherland kale in to – from real seeds

  • Stephanie Bryant
    Reply

    I had been wondering if it was going to work sowing some kale now so you doing a video on what you can this time of year answered my thoughts.

  • Steve- in-Cornwall
    Reply

    Another good video Dan.  I've sown Kale and cauliflower today.  Hopefully they'll be OK. Potatoes for Christmas going into tubs tomorrow.    PS. Your long hair is looking incredible.  keep it growing !

  • Christina
    Reply

    Thank you for a good video. I'm new to this, I live in a city with a very very small garden – no space for a greenhouse or tunnel. This year I tried growing broad beans in containers. The snails devoured the small plants within days leaving just the stalks:/ any ideas what I can do (humanely) to keep them away from edibles I'm growing. I don't want to kill them. Ant ideas would be greatly appreciated

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