|
Florence Fennel
(also Finocchio) |
Plant in garden. | Harvest from December |
| French tarragon | Plant in garden. | Harvest from October |
| Garlic | Plant in garden. | Harvest from January |
| Pak Choy | Plant in garden. | Harvest from October |
| Radish | Plant in garden. | Harvest from October |
|
Rocket
(also Arugula/Rucola) |
Plant in garden. | Harvest from October |
|
Spinach
(also English spinach) |
Plant in garden. | Harvest from October |
|
Swedes
(also Rutabagas) |
Plant in garden. | Harvest from November |
| Turnip | Plant in garden. | Harvest from October |
| Angelica | Plant in garden. | Harvest from 18 months |
|
Beetroot
(also Beets) |
Plant in garden. | Harvest from December |
| Garlic | Plant in garden. | Harvest from February |
|
Jerusalem Artichokes
(also Sunchoke) |
Plant in garden. | Harvest from February |
|
Spinach
(also English spinach) |
Plant in garden. | Harvest from November |
|
Swedes
(also Rutabagas) |
Plant in garden. | Harvest from December |
This planting guide is a general reference intended for home gardeners. We recommend that you take into account your local conditions in making planting decisions. Gardenate is not a farming or commercial advisory service. For specific advice, please contact your local plant suppliers, gardening groups, or agricultural department. The information on this site is presented in good faith, but we take no responsibility as to the accuracy of the information provided.
Recent comments/tips
This is normal. They can often be in the ground for up to a year. One to avoid if space is limited. Or if you are impatient!
for Leeks
You certainly can. They are actually an understory plant, so will do ok in partial shade. They love warm soil/roots, so if you have any paint, paint the gutter matt black.
for Strawberry Plants
The leaves are delicious in stir fries, omelettes, stews etc.
for Radish
Hugo, I live in Sydney and grow Mizuna hydroponically all year 'round. Typically I re-seed 3-4 times a year. If you harvest heavily the plants will re-shoot. I grow in cups of perlite and just ...
for Mizuna
Borage is a great bee attractor. Only use young (small) leaves in salads as they get bigger they get fury.
for Borage
Read all recent comments