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Companion planting
I recently moved to a mountainside in North West Wales where I have a large patio with flowerbeds and a view down to the sea. I've grown fruit and veg on a south facing balcony before but this is the first time dealing with stuff you actually plant in the soil! And although spring has been sunny and warm, the location means we're prone to high winds and (I've been told) a lot of salt content. Certainly, my patio is the most exposed of all the properties up here and I've noticed that plants tend to be slower to flower than those downhill. In terms of adding colour, I'm having a bit more success with bedding plants in tubs.
I picked up what I think is a blueberry bush from a local branch of Netto one night. They were selling them cheap and I'd never grown anything like it before. I didn't want to plant it out front as I wasn't sure how big it could get but I thought I could at least give it a try in a pot. Added the marigolds a week ago in order to keep insects away, along with a handful of fresh bark chippings. It's actually starting to look a lot healthier than it does in this picture.

I picked up what I think is a blueberry bush from a local branch of Netto one night. They were selling them cheap and I'd never grown anything like it before. I didn't want to plant it out front as I wasn't sure how big it could get but I thought I could at least give it a try in a pot. Added the marigolds a week ago in order to keep insects away, along with a handful of fresh bark chippings. It's actually starting to look a lot healthier than it does in this picture.

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I took over a 5gal bucket of my compost and worked it into a section of their area, so they could grow *something* this season at least. And I told her what to do to help loosen the soil more, by working in coffee grounds, egg shells, tea leaves, fruit/veggie leavings, you know, general composting stuff.
So I get a text yesterday, telling me the soil is still pretty crappy. Um, it's been a week that you've been amending it, it's not going to get better overnight. Boggled my mind that they actually thought a week of adding a few things here and there would make their soil better. O.o
It's taken me 10 years to get my soil- slate and clay mostly- to a good, not great, just good, growing soil. There's a reason most of my beds are raised afterall.}:P I should tell them about yours taking 6 years.}:P
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incredibly annoyingevergreen bushes in them). But I had worked through that by the end of the first summer! Since then, it's just been about feeding in enough finished compost to get it going.I don't just have clay, I also have tons of rocks and chunks of building material in there. It's clear no one ever intended my garden to be fruitful. :)
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Meantime, I am also learning the meaning of stony ground!