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This week’s episode of The Veg Grower Podcast is packed with personal updates, seasonal sowing, and an honest reflection on feeling overwhelmed during the busy summer gardening season.
Here’s what you can expect:
This week saw a major upgrade in the garden — Richard has installed a brand new potting shed, combining greenhouse-style light with the solid build of a traditional shed. After removing the old, crumbling structure (which had long become a dumping ground), he replaced it with a spacious, double-doored model from Power Sheds.
The new shed is already kitted out with shelves, growing trays and will be used primarily for propagation. It’s a significant investment, but one that promises more organised and efficient seed sowing going forward.
This month’s featured seed is Florence Fennel, also known as bulb fennel. Richard discusses how to sow it, where it grows best, and why now is the perfect time to get it going.
Key growing notes:
Richard prefers to start his in pots due to weed competition in open ground. He’ll be growing his inside the new potting shed.
You can buy Florence fennel from our chosen suppliers below
Chef Scott shares a beautifully simple and deeply flavoured recipe this week — Confit Elephant Garlic.
By slow-cooking peeled garlic cloves in olive oil with rosemary and sea salt, you get soft, spreadable garlic perfect for toast or adding richness to dishes like bolognese. It’s a great way to preserve a bumper garlic harvest, and Richard plans to make a batch of his own.
Richard opens up about the realities of struggling to keep up with the demands of summer gardening. From constant watering during a dry year to family life and work commitments, he shares his honest thoughts on burnout and how he’s coping.
Tips discussed include:
This segment is a reassuring reminder that it’s okay to slow down, simplify, and approach growing your own food in a sustainable, realistic way.
A big thank you to Annabel Scott for her Spotify review, praising the podcast and Chef Scott’s seasonal recipes. It’s feedback like this that helps grow the community and reminds us why we do what we do.
Also check out this article from Thompson and Morgon about natural pest control.
If you would like to support this podcast then please consider becoming a member of our supporters club or use some of affiliate links below for items you might be buying. We might get a little commission
4.8
99 ratings
This week’s episode of The Veg Grower Podcast is packed with personal updates, seasonal sowing, and an honest reflection on feeling overwhelmed during the busy summer gardening season.
Here’s what you can expect:
This week saw a major upgrade in the garden — Richard has installed a brand new potting shed, combining greenhouse-style light with the solid build of a traditional shed. After removing the old, crumbling structure (which had long become a dumping ground), he replaced it with a spacious, double-doored model from Power Sheds.
The new shed is already kitted out with shelves, growing trays and will be used primarily for propagation. It’s a significant investment, but one that promises more organised and efficient seed sowing going forward.
This month’s featured seed is Florence Fennel, also known as bulb fennel. Richard discusses how to sow it, where it grows best, and why now is the perfect time to get it going.
Key growing notes:
Richard prefers to start his in pots due to weed competition in open ground. He’ll be growing his inside the new potting shed.
You can buy Florence fennel from our chosen suppliers below
Chef Scott shares a beautifully simple and deeply flavoured recipe this week — Confit Elephant Garlic.
By slow-cooking peeled garlic cloves in olive oil with rosemary and sea salt, you get soft, spreadable garlic perfect for toast or adding richness to dishes like bolognese. It’s a great way to preserve a bumper garlic harvest, and Richard plans to make a batch of his own.
Richard opens up about the realities of struggling to keep up with the demands of summer gardening. From constant watering during a dry year to family life and work commitments, he shares his honest thoughts on burnout and how he’s coping.
Tips discussed include:
This segment is a reassuring reminder that it’s okay to slow down, simplify, and approach growing your own food in a sustainable, realistic way.
A big thank you to Annabel Scott for her Spotify review, praising the podcast and Chef Scott’s seasonal recipes. It’s feedback like this that helps grow the community and reminds us why we do what we do.
Also check out this article from Thompson and Morgon about natural pest control.
If you would like to support this podcast then please consider becoming a member of our supporters club or use some of affiliate links below for items you might be buying. We might get a little commission
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