Hi Jo
Thanks for the link. I'm a bit lazy about watering things and the sun and the soil that I have dries out very quickly.
Our growing season is very short but most single season stuff does well although parsnips never get very big - my kids reckon they are better small and sweet but the yield is very poor. Same with broadbeans really, only one crop of beans and even then I have to make sure I buy the right sort. Runner beans are a none starter as the leaves go all papery and they just don't grow, too cold in early summer I suppose. I use that acriculural fleece stuff a lot because it keeps things a bit warmer.
Red currants and gooseberries do very very well, and black currants ok. Strawberries are possible too. Calebrese but not purple sprouting broccoli or anything else that needs to live the winter. Which is why I fancy that square foot thing as it looks as though the plants get intensive conditions. Also, I've been battling some nasty weed, forget what it is but the leaves grow fairly flat and a small flower spike has long seed pods on it. By the time the plant is big enough to weed the seeds are ready and at first tough they explode everywhere

So hope to get rid of those blighters by putting down raised beds on top of the old soil and coverimg the rest of the soil with some membrane stuff.
Ooh, can't wit to start now but at the moment we have a fair bit of snow so I don't suppose there is much chance of doing anything! Beginning of May is about the best time. bedding plants are usually put out beginning of June so that there is some colour for the national day on teh 17th.
Think I'll oder a square foot book off amazon and then see if I can even get the stuff to mix the "soil". Not sure sacks of vermiculite are an option, wonder if I can use fine pummice? Got lots of that around the country from various volcanoes
