Get sowing and reap the rewards
Yates competition gives Te Awamutu Courier readers the chance to win heirloom packs
With the cost of living crisis continuing to bite at the heels, National Gardening Week is shining a light on the many benefits of growing your own vegetables.
One company that has been helping Kiwis garden since 1883 is Yates.
Yates spokeswoman Fiona Arthur says getting started on a vege garden is as simple as popping some seeds in the ground.
“Growing your own veges is a never-ending learning process and so much fun. There is nothing better than picking you own veges to pop in the pot — not to mention the massive savings that can be made.”
To celebrate its 140 years, Yates has curated a selection of popular, time-tested New Zealand heirloom vegetable and flower seeds into a new range.
Handed down through the generations and trusted by Kiwi gardeners, the range includes old-time favourites such as tomatoes, beetroot, radish, broccoli, lettuce and cabbage as well as oregano and marigolds.
Yates is giving Te Awamutu Courier readers the chance to win one of three sets of their new Heirloom seeds together with a commemorative canvas tote. Entry details in the box beside the photo.
National Gardening Week aims to foster a love of gardening with a focus on growing plants and friendships, good health, strong communities and closer connections with nature.
Whether it’s a few pots on the balcony, a small patch or an extensive garden, everyone can experience the joy of gardening.
With prime planting season upon us, Yates wants to share the benefits of home-grown veges. They say they are cheaper, fresher, often have a higher nutritional value and provide a great sense of satisfaction at harvesting time.
You can join the growing movement of people who are growing more for less.
Even if you’ve never planted peas or potatoes, peppers or pumpkins, there is never a better time to start. To help you get started, Yates has listed some tips for beginners.
Gardening hacks for beginners
Clear plastic sushi or salad “clamshell” containers make great mini greenhouses for getting seeds started. Just poke a few vent holes in the lid, fill the bottom half with seed-raising mix and sow your seeds. Add a little bit of water, close the lid and place the container in a sunny spot.
If you’re planting out seedlings in cooler temperatures you can protect them from frost — and slugs or snails — by using 2 litre soft drink bottles. Take off the lid, cut off the bottom and push the bottle down over the seedling, into the soil. When the seedling is ready to face the elements, remove the bottle during the day and pop it back on overnight, until the seedling is mature enough to grow on its own.
If you’re short on space, you can start a bag garden. Black soft plastic polybags can be placed anywhere, are inexpensive and are an economical option to replace rigid and heavier pots when growing veges and herbs. Use biggersize bags because smaller bags dry out faster in hot weather.
Attract insect pollinators to your vegetable garden with colourful flowers. The more bees and butterflies you have visiting your veges, the better your harvest will be.
If you have cats in your neighbourhood make sure there isn’t any exasperating litterbox action in your newly sowed areas by “planting” disposable wooden forks or chopsticks into the soil to discourage digging, or just a bunch of pruning offcuts pushed into the soil.
Take advantage of sunny house or garage walls to grow tall tomatoes. Plant seeds in polybags and hang lengths of stretchy cotton plant ties from cup hooks under the eaves. You can spiral wrap it around the main stems to hang up the plant, then gradually train it to full height. Even a tomato plant heavily laden with fruit will hang quite comfortably from stretchy plant ties.
If you’re growing beetroot, there’s a good trick to maximise your results: soak the seeds in water overnight before you sow. When the seeds sink in the water, they’re ready. Each “seed” is actually a cluster of 1-4 true seeds, protected by a corky outer coating.
Double the life of your vegetables by sprouting them from scraps that may normally get thrown out, including lettuce, celery, bok choy, leeks, and onions. Simply place the cut base of the vegetable in an inch of water, place in good light and change the water every couple of days. Once roots have shown on the cuttings, the sprouted vegetables can be planted out in the garden, or transferred into pots, to grow on into new plants.
Grow your vegetables from seed instead of seedlings. The math is simple — you get dozens more plants from a packet of seeds, for a fraction of the cost.
Join a garden club or community garden and learn everything you need to know from the pros.