Gardens and gardening 2025

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Hi everyone, I used to post a lot in a previous Gardens etc until my wife was also diagnosed with cancer just over 2 years ago and she went through such a hard time so my time was taken up with not just Mrs Tvman but I was not good because of the rise and fall of red cells, white cells, neutrophils and platelets. 

The good news is that I have a little bit more free time to garden. I never stopped because it's in my DNA to get working in the garden. I'm also a wheelchair user because of a serious back condition called spinal stenosis and the pain is so great that I'm only able to work in short bursts.

So let's see photos of your gardens or allotments, whether they be large or small or maybe you only have room for pots and troughs in a balcony or back yard. 

My speciality for the last 40 years is vegetables and I have won hundreds of prizes over the last 20 years or so. I have had vegetables in show that have made me Northern Ireland champion for my sins. Unfortunately, since covid some shows have ceased therefore I haven't entered any for a few years. 

I've a few photos below, that's if I can remember how to insert them! It's been a while.

Below is a photo of the contents of my greenhouse, there are tomato plants left and right of the pathway. Also just past the tomatoes are cucumber plants against that have frames for them to climb up. The cucumber variety is Mini Munch, they're a small variety that are sufficient for a few salads 

The plants in the large pots below are aubergines, variety Black Beauty and inbetween the pots is a seed tray in which spring onion seeds have been sown which of course haven't germinated yet. Over here in Northern Ireland we call spring onions "scallions" and apart from in salads we have them with butter in mashed potatoes and that dish is called "champ". Believe it or not that was served as a stand alone dish that we had when I was small, some 60 years ago. Just mashed potatoes with small pieces of cut up scallions, cooked slowly in real butter then a dinner plate was loaded up with champ, a hole made in the top and filled with more butter then everything was mixed together and eaten. Along with an Ulster Fry in the morning, no wonder we had the highest rate of heart disease in Europe! 

Last photo below for this post is a bed of garlic (on the left), shallots in the foreground and at the far end for those of you eagle-eyed is a few red and white onions that are just 2 or 3 inches high. They are grown from onion sets that are small immature onions and usually come in a net bag weighing 250g and there are about 70 in total.

You'll notice that I have wire netting around the beds, that's because 3 years ago I had a rabbit problem. 35 years without them, 1½ years of rabbits and none since! The wire netting is staying for a while yet!

What about some photos from anyone else?

Tvman 

  • Hi you garden lovers, I've been trying for sometime to persuade my wife (her garden) to tolerate a dedicated stinging nettle patch but it's a futile endeavour I fear. Heard that nettles are a go-to meal for admiral butterflies and others?

    Patrick xx

  • Patrick, nettles are essential for many species of butterfly, who early in spring lay their eggs on them as nettles are the most reliable source of food for catapillers who emerge early in the year xx

  • A photo to brighten up a rainy day

    Patrick xx

  • Not technically gardens, but above the gardens. Do any of you have your swifts back yet? We spent a couple of weeks in Mallorca, returning the middle of last week. Loads of swifts wherever we went, but still not seen any in the skies at home (Hampshire coast). They are one of the delights of the year for me. Every year I wonder if if I will live to see them return again. 

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  •   it's wonderful, so much going on, butit works together perfectly. xx

      no swallows here yet in the very south of Yorkshire, and my youngest's farm is a magnet for them with roosts, water everywhere, piles of manure and 100% organic.

  • Yes Patrick, nettles attract butterflies but it seems they don't attract the dreaded cabbage white. I usually have to cover brassicas with fine netting or fleece. Once I had the proprietary 1cm netting and I watched a cabbage white squeezing through the tiny hole. Honestly I wouldn't have believed anyone telling me that until I saw it myself. Amazing. 

    A problem with nettles is that they send runners underground and new nettles pop up where you're least expecting them.

    Take care Patrick 

    Tvman x

    Love life and family.
  • Well haven’t you all been busy in your gardens and allotments. They look beautiful. I have to admit I have given up with my garden this year. Alfie has duh up nearly every plant, and if it’s in a pot it has no chance at all! If he has a treat he will run out into the garden with it, dig a whole and bury it, then dig it up again almost immediately! Eddie tells me this is the jack russle in him, and as I have not had this breed before it’s all a learning curve for me. 

    “Try to be a rainbow, in somebody else's cloud” ~ Maya Angelou
    Chelle 

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  • Alfie is still a pup so your plants should be safe in maybe 6 or 7 years! 

    Ever thought of putting a few hanging baskets up, that's one way to bring colour to your house and they'll be Alfie proof. You'll be able to get ready made hanging baskets in a good garden centre. Just a thought Chelle. If you're going on holiday you can buy things to mix in the compost and they absorb water so unless it's very hot your flowers will be fine for a week or two.

    Tvman x

    Love life and family.
  • That’s exactly what mr Simo suggested. 

    “Try to be a rainbow, in somebody else's cloud” ~ Maya Angelou
    Chelle 

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  • Great minds? Grinning

    Love life and family.