"Garlic - Buy garlic
for planting in October or early November.
‘Vallelado’ is suitable for autumn and early winter planting; ‘Flavour’
for late winter and early spring planting.
To avoid the risk of introducing diseases, don’t use cloves bought from
the greengrocer. Planting a named variety ensures you are growing a variety
suited to the UK.
Onions Autumn onion
sets, such as Radar and Electric Red can be planted now
Land cress - Also known as American land cress. Makes an excellent
substitute for watercress and is very hardy, usually surviving even the
toughest winter.
Chinese leaves - There is a great choice of oriental salads
to sow now, giving a supply of salad or stir-fry leaves over the autumn and
winter. Some (marked* below) are best with some protection, and all will crop
more generously under cover. If you are not sure what you like, try Oriental
Saldini - a mixture of various greens. Green in Snow, Mizuna Greens*, Mibuna
Greens*, Giant Red Mustard*, Indian mustard, Komatsuna*, Pak choi*.
Lamb's lettuce - Also called corn salad, very hardy winter
salad with a soft texture and mild flavour. Lasts well throughout the winter,
and when it flowers next spring the flowers can be eaten too.
Winter lettuce - Slower and less reliable perhaps than the
salads listed above. Use a winter variety such as Rouge d'Hiver, Winter Density
or Winter Crop, for harvesting in November and December.
Winter purslane - Goes by the additional names of claytonia
and miner's lettuce. Another very hardy
winter salad, good at self-seeding. Produces small, mild tasting, succulent
leaves. Sow in unheated greenhouse/polytunnel.
Broad bean - Sow Super Aquadulce, Aquadulce Claudia and
Imperial Green Longpod towards the end of the month. The Sutton can be grown
under cloches.
Peas - Round seeded peas can be grown from October/November
sowings. An organic variety is the Douce Provence. Other varieties include
Feltham First, Meteor or Pilot (probably the hardiest of all varieties).
Spring cabbages - Cabbages that were sown last month are
probably ready for planting out now. Cover with enviromesh to prevent the
pigeons from nibbling at them"
Source - Garden Organic
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