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Potato blight

By Pippa Greenwood on 09/07/2009 17:54:48

Here we are in early July and I have a horrible feeling that potato blight is just around the corner. The weather has been perfect for this horrible fungal infection to wreak havoc on everyone's home-grown spuds. By the look of the weather right now


Growing tomatoes and tomato blight

By Pippa Greenwood on 12/08/2009 15:35:58

Tomatoes - I can't get enough of them. I grow most of my tomatoes in the greenhouse, as growing them outside increases the risk of them getting tomato blight. Sadly, tomato blight thrives in the warm, wet summers we've had recently.So far this year


Tomato and potato blight

By Pippa Greenwood on 08/09/2010 17:54:17

then the air was positively dripping. So, I'm amazed at just how little blight I've seen on tomatoes or potatoes.There was some blight on a few of the potato varieties I've been growing this year, but even then the brown patches on the leaves remained as tight


Tasty tomatoes

By Pippa Greenwood on 01/08/2007 16:03:35

This is the time of year when I go tomato crazy. Suddenly I've gone from eating relatively few tomatoes to buying punnet loads from the shops. There is no doubt that if you go for the British Grown logo on the front of the pack they taste 100


Growing autumn-fruiting raspberries

By Pippa Greenwood on 06/03/2013 16:05:00

to growing autumn varieties such as ‘Autumn Bliss’, ‘Joan J’ and ‘Fallgold’, which I prize for its pretty yellow fruits.Wet summers, such as those we’ve had recently, greatly increase the risk of raspberry cane blight. Canes infected with blight tend to look


Tomatoes: best varieties for flavour

By Adam Pasco on 14/12/2009 14:07:33

position.Just one word of caution. In my neck of the woods in the East Midlands I really can't risk growing tomatoes outside without plants succumbing to blight. This really is a devastating fungus disease, attacking the foliage and fruits of tomatoes (as


Sowing salad crops

By Pippa Greenwood on 21/02/2008 14:03:00

that managed to escape the dreaded potato blight were enthusiastically hoovered up by the family months ago ("they're so much nicer than the shop-bought potatoes").But this year, having sown surplus seed from a Gardeners' World growing trial, I'm enjoying


Growing early potatoes

By Pippa Greenwood on 12/03/2009 08:15:18

with either a piece of old carpet, some cardboard or some black polythene. Then plant the tubers, re-covering the soil with fleece or a mini-tunnel to keep them warm. The advantages of growing spuds early is that you miss the blight fungus that kills off so


Protecting plants from frost

By Pippa Greenwood on 19/10/2011 17:15:56

that the last few fruits reach the table. Unfortunately, this year my outdoor tomatoes have succumbed to blight.There is something vaguely comforting about this time of year – it’s as if we’re ‘all in it together’. We can enjoy some bright warm days but we


Growing tomatoes: dos and don'ts

By Kate Bradbury on 11/03/2010 16:05:08

My experience of growing tomatoes has been relatively trouble-free. My outdoor plants often get blight towards the end of the season, but even then it doesn't seem to affect the crop too much. Once my plants refused to grow after I transplanted them


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