What to sow in October | Veggie seeds for October | Self-sufficient vegetable garden

Author:

Category:


What to sow in October | Veggie seeds for October | Self-sufficient vegetable garden. What seeds can I sow in October? Suggested seeds to sow in October for continued harvesting throughout the year. Seed details below. Gardening tips for October. If you are wondering which seeds to sow in the garden or sow on the allotment in early autumn, or what vegetables can I plant in October, here are a few ideas. We live in the equivalent of hardiness Zone 8b, so I think it’s safe to say we are growing in zone 8.
Steve’s Seaside Allotment
Erica’s Little Welsh Garden

Seeds in UK (As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.)
Broad Bean – Aquadulce Claudia
Field Beans
Calabrese – Marathon
Cauliflower – All The Year Round
Spring Cabbage – April
Kale – Red Russian
Lettuces – Organic Winter Density or Winter Gem
Corn Salad (lamb’s lettuce)
Spring Onions – Performer
Peas – Meteor (first early)
Organic Spinach – Giant Winter
Salad Leaves – Oriental Ruby Streaks or Mustard Green in Snow or Organic Mizuna
Onion sets – Senshyu Overwintering onions
Garlic – Provence Wight or try The Garlic Farm
Carrots – Amsterdam 3
Beetroot – Chioggia

Seeds in USA (As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases)
Spring Cabbage – Copenhagan Market Early (can be sown now for late year harvest)
Cauliflower – Snowball
Lettuces – Organic Winter Density
Corn Salad (lamb’s lettuce)
Spring Onions – White Lisbon or Organic White Nebraska
Overwintering Onions – Senshyu Yellow or Ruby
Winter Spinach – Organic American Spinach
Salad Leaves – Mustard Tendergreen or Red Giant
Carrots – Tendersweet

BYTHER FARM T SHIRTS, HOODIES etc (ship to UK, EU and USA)

BYTHER FARM MUGS (ship to UK, EU and USA)

About Us.
Byther Farm is a small organic homestead, designed and managed using permaculture practices. We aim for self-sufficiency in fruit and vegetables for increased self reliance and better resilience to the modern world. I recognise that we are unlikely to be truly self sufficient, but do the best we can. I share our home with my loving partner, Mr J and our cat, Monty.
We are a fifty-something couple who live on a smallholding in Monmouthshire, Wales. We are going green and creating a gentler, cleaner and more healthy life for our family.
There is a large organic kitchen garden with no dig gardening raised beds and young food forest in which to grown our fruit and vegetables.
We keep chickens and Aylesbury ducks.

Music
‘Breathe’ by Kafkadiva. www.kafkadiva.com
Other music by www.EpidemicSound.com

source

Read More

Related Articles

42 COMMENTS

  1. If you've enjoyed this video, please share it with your friends and on social media. And don't forget to check out Steve's Seaside Allotment and Erica's Little Welsh Garden for more great gardening videos!

  2. I'm in the Pacific Northwestern United States zone 7b with a temperate climate much like yours. I have found that English gardeners, such as yourself, have been such a wonderful font of knowledge for me as our climate is very similar. Thank you so very much for sharing your knowledge 🙏 ❤.

  3. In the video Liz didn’t recommend a beetroot variety. For winter growing I found Pablo and Rhonda both do well under cover and don’t go hard and woody.
    Kale does grow well, Liz recommended red Russian, my favourite is dwarf green curled. Spinach matador does well in a polyunnel planted in a seed tray in September and then into the ground undercover in October. Tatsoi is also good over wintered and is fast growing, it is like a cross between young pak choi and a baby leaf spinach.
    I agree with the Amsterdam3 carrot recommendation. Eskimo is another good carrot variety.

  4. Hello liz, OMG so glad to have found you. I live in South Wales and have been growing veg for a few years, although I still feel my knowledge is that of a beginner. I haven’t grown in the winter before, but I have sown cauliflower, broccoli potatoes, and hope to do carrots and perhaps peas. I don’t have a grow tunnel as it’s windy here ( near the loughor estuary) so they tend to lift in the wind and I’ve lost many a tray of seedlings. Can you advise where I can buy the hoop tubing please. I’d like to get what I’ve sown under plastic before it gets too cold. Thank you for all you do.

  5. Hi Liz, I have just taken up gardening and have built myself a raised border, two feet deep, 12 feet by 3feet, I am wanting to plant winter veg or even soft fruit, any tips/information in what to fit in my raised border would be a great help to me for future gardening! I have created young strawberry plants from the mother plant, should I transfer them into the raised border with plastic covering, I had a pot of raspberries that only gave me 6 raspberries, do I need to cut/trim them back before re-planting them under cover for the winter? Many thanks Liz!

  6. We have large backward so planning for vegetable farming from next week but have no idea about seeds where to bring from even fertilizer and this season farming. Thank you your video is helpful but please suggest me where I can bring seeds and what's the name of them 🙏 I will be grateful

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here