Wysoka grządka - co sadzić i jak uprawiać warzywa w podwyższanych grządkach?
Time to plant more vegetables! What's going into my raised beds this time? 🥒🍅🥒 That's what today's video from the "Vegetable Garden" series is all about. Enjoy! 😊 The two raised beds that I added to my garden this year as additional vegetable growing areas are standard sizes: 120 cm long, 80 cm wide, and about 60 cm high. However, since they're placed on a pallet, they're slightly taller. This height can be adjusted by adding the number of boards (boards) in this type of structure. If you decide on a triple layer, it's recommended to use 4-5 50-liter bags of wood chips as the bottom layer, followed by 3-4 bags of compost, and then 3 50-liter bags of growing medium on top. In a bed prepared this way, we can start growing our chosen vegetables, which can become not only a tasty and healthy food for us, but also a decorative addition to our garden, balcony, or terrace. Vegetable beds don't have to be boring; they can be colorful, cheerful, and attractive, depending on the species we plant. Above all, when it comes to vegetables, we should be guided by taste. Let's plant the vegetables we like best. And for many of us, tomatoes are one of those vegetables. Mine is no exception. So, they will also be placed in my raised beds, along with peppers, okra, cucumbers, and lettuce, but before that happens, it's worth watering them all thoroughly. This will make the seedlings' roots more flexible and less susceptible to damage, and the young plants themselves, well-watered, will better tolerate transplanting, and sometimes even dividing them if they were previously growing several in one container. Since I already have large-fruited tomatoes in various varieties growing in my vegetable garden, these two raised beds will be filled with cherry tomatoes: Perun, with pear-shaped yellow fruit; Radana, with pear-shaped fruit but red; and Black Cherry, with round, dark, almost black fruit. It'll be colorful and cheerful as soon as they appear. These tomato seedlings will be placed on the edges of the pots at the back of the greenhouse and by the fence. They'll be tall, so I need to add supports here, to which I'll then secure the developing shoots. These stakes need to be quite sturdy, or there need to be more of them than the tomato plants themselves, because I don't remove the cherry tomatoes' vines; I let them grow quite freely. Therefore, they will likely be quite large. We can plant the tomatoes deeper than they have been growing so far. They will develop additional roots from the recessed part of the stem. Each of these pots will also contain one sweet pepper seedling, the Robertina variety, with large, sweet red fruit. Generally, peppers don't require staking, but if they develop a lot of fruit, it's worth supporting them with a support to prevent the heavy fruit-bearing shoots from breaking. Each pot will also contain an okra seedling with dark burgundy fruit. Okra will be decorative during flowering, with its truly charming flowers, and even later, when the fruit appears, which are star-shaped in cross-section. It's not as popular to grow as tomatoes or peppers, but as a vegetable curiosity, it will fit perfectly in a raised bed. Its fruit can be eaten raw, especially when young, for example, in salads. They can also be baked, like eggplants, or sautéed, like bell peppers. At the front of the raised beds, I'll plant two varieties of cucumbers: one field-grown Rufus variety, whose seedlings have already grown beautifully in the greenhouse and are ready to be planted, and the other salad variety, which germinated several days late, so they're much smaller. These cucumbers will take up space at the front, as I'll train them to hang over the raised beds. If they grow healthily, they might even spread out a bit on the patio. For now, we still need to wait for the colorful tomatoes, peppers, and okra to develop, so we can add color to these beds with, for example, colorful lettuce leaves. So, I'll also plant some Crimson lettuce seedlings here, with pinkish-purple, scalloped leaves, which I still have left from my March sowings. I'll have time to harvest them before the other plants develop. In the same way, using compost and vegetable growing medium, or a universal growing medium, or tomato soil, we can create a mini vegetable patch in a pot if we don't have room in the garden, on the terrace, or balcony for a raised bed... I wish you beautiful, healthy, and abundant harvests. And I invite you to watch the next videos in the "Vegetable Garden" series and other videos on the OGRÓD NA CO DZIEŃ channel. Links: Facebook: / izabella.schick Blog: https://ogrodnacodzien.pl/ Instagram: / ogrod_na_co_dzien #garden #gardenplant #balcony #cultivation #vegetablegrowing #tomatogrowing #vegetables #vegetablesupreme #vegetablegarden #gardengarden #gardengarden #garden_for_day #crone #tips #guide

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