May 29, 2024

VIDEO: Growing Peas From Sowing to Harvest 💚


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Nutritious, delicious and oh, so ap-PEA-ling! Peas are the must-have vegetable for any gardener’s patch.

Learn everything you need to know to grow your own peas, from which varieties to choose, different ways to sow, plant and support them as well as when to pick peas for the best flavor.

If you love growing your own food, why not take a look at our online Garden Planner which is available from several major websites and seed suppliers:
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https://gardenplanner.almanac.com
https://gardenplanner.motherearthnews.com
and many more…

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26 thoughts on “VIDEO: Growing Peas From Sowing to Harvest 💚

  1. I have a few varieties of peas, Jaguar and Lord Leicester included – plus one type I saved from some fresh pod peas I bought in a supermarket (liked the taste, so carefully dried out a few, not expecting it to work. But, amazingly, it did and I've carried on growing this type to this day).

    I have tons and tons of mice rampaging through my garden, so I have to plant my peas in pots until I'm sure the 'seed pea' has well and truly grown out, and then plant them in containers, often raised up off the ground (because the mice here are really accomplished climbers and leapers).

    Although we also have a lot of pigeons in the area, no one feeds birds around here, so they won't stay where there isn't a daily supply of food, remain very shy of humans, and are more likely to keep well away from houses and frequented vegetable plots.
    I still feed the smaller song-birds I 'do' want – by planting a few well-chosen berry bushes to one side of the garden. Pigeons are too heavy and clumsy to perch in them, and so – without regular food – they go away in search of easier fare.

  2. hi. have a question: i noticed in multiple videos you hang CD and shinny objects. why? how does this help? i used to use aluminum foil at the base of plants to deter bores, but why hang them? thank you if you choose to reply. all replies are welcomed

  3. What about mice once eating them once they've been started off in a tray and planted out in the ground? I don't see any protection on them.

  4. I’m from Lancashire and black/Carlin peas with salt and vinegar are amazing in the dark nights they remind me of old days with my Nan around a fire . I’m desperate to grow these and have ordered some dry ones on Amazon so really hoping I manage it so we can have homegrown black peas when the summer is over ❤️

  5. Wish I had seen this video before painting lots of varieties of peas and some broad beans. I had let in water first, and all had sported accept one variety. Put direct in garden, and then had cold spell -3 for a few days at night (Côte d'Azur France).. No sign of growth after 12 days, no mice or birds have had a go at them. Do you think a bad idea to have sprouted first, or do you think was the cold? Any advice welcome. Will plant in house now, but a question for the mushroom cage. Won't the soil fall out?

  6. One year I grew snow peas to use in stir fry. The plants were healthy and had plenty of great looking pods. But they were bitter no matter how I prepared them. Frustrated, I ended up pulling the plants and chopping them onto the compost pile. What did I do wrong?

  7. Hi, thanks for this it has been really useful! I sowed my sugar snap peas 10 days ago into plug trays. When they are ready to go into the ground, do you recommend I plant each compartment at a time with some plants therefore close together, or separate every plant including the ones that are next to each other in the compartments of the trays?

  8. Just subscribed to the yearly planners as I realised i wont be able to mentally keep all of this info in my head and it looks like it will tell me when to do things so I dont have to keep so much info in my head. And what to plant with what and everything. So that will be a good bit of stress taken out of it for 30 quid.

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