Creating a new vegetable bedby Emma CooperWHETHER you made a new year’s resolution to cut your carbon footprint, or the credit crunch is putting pressure on your food budget, now is the perfect time to try growing some of your own vegetables. You don't need a lot of space, or expensive kit, to get started, and it doesn't need to take up a lot of time. Finding a spaceMost vegetables and fruit need a sunny spot, so think about which areas of your garden get the most light during Spring and Summer, the peak growing times. Perhaps there is a section of lawn you could dig over, or room on the patio for a raised bed or some containers? Maybe you could grow some vegetables in your flower beds instead of splashing out on bedding plants; there are some varieties that look very ornamental. And don't forget to consider vertical spaces. Runner beans look lovely clambering up a pergola, and fruit bushes can be trained against walls and fences. Choosing cropsThere are two golden rules when you're starting a new kitchen garden. The first is to only grow things you are going to eat. It doesn't matter what the latest trend in vegetables is, or what exciting new varieties are listed in the seed catalogues; if no-one in your family likes turnips or sprouts, or even carrots, then you are wasting valuable space by growing them. The second rule is not to try to grow everything at once. You need to be realistic about how much space you have. Being self-sufficient in potatoes is a pipedream unless you have an allotment, but it is easy to grow enough herbs and salads to last all summer. A handful of home-grown strawberries will be a treat on summer days, cherry tomatoes do well in containers and hanging baskets, and if you have a sunny spot or a greenhouse, then chilli peppers are fun and very attractive. Water and compostThe last couple of years have been very wet, but the weather is unpredictable and it is always worth being prepared for a hosepipe ban by installing a water butt or two in the garden. Fixed to the downpipe on the guttering, they collect water when it rains that is great for watering thirsty plants and washing cars. It is something to think about now, before the weather really warms up.
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