
Healthy food for the dark months
News and advice from Charles to you

13th December, leeks and Brussels nearest, many beds mulched for soil feed and spring planting
The thumbnail photo is Brussels Brigitte F1, which stands better than Brilliant; it’s good until March.
Find more beautiful vegetables on our tea towel, of Emma van Zeller’s drawings printed on organic cotton. I have just discounted it for Christmas and until 31st December, from £15.00 to £9.90.

Tea towel beauty
Winter is setting in and it’s time to mulch beds with organic matter, to ensure health and fertility through 2026. Compost or manure can be spread lumpy at this time, because frosts then break up those lumps.
Contrary to old-fashioned advice relating to ‘feeding plants’, I give compost to all beds, whatever they're going to grow. It’s about feeding soil life and for example, see the carrot picture below. More details in my No Dig book.

Lumpy compost in the middle bed will be made fine by frosts
The garden is two thirds empty now, but there is no bare soil because of the mulching.
Plus I'm very happy to have made the extra effort in late summer to early autumn, to grow the sowings and plantings as you see here. For example, the coriander below. Timing is key to this success, see my Calendar 2026.

Coriander Cruiser, from homesaved seed, sown 8th September, and with this cover over the whole time. Plants should produce until end April, for little time needed apart from picking
Likewise these cabbage, which I was unsure about growing because they are a summer variety. However, they have adapted well to autumn conditions and although the hearts are not tight tight, they are firm enough to store well for now.
I find it best to harvest them before they start to decay with fungal damage, which is common in December. Find more harvest, planting and spacing advice in our Essential Knowledge digital pack, which just had this review:
Very Informative
Excellent course showing when and how to sow, plant, look after and harvest a host of vegetables. Brilliant value for money. Looking forward to using this next year.

Golden Acre sown 13th July, planted 13th August and we now harvest these remaining lovely heads to store a month or more
Outside, salads coming good to harvest now are lambs lettuce, truly wonderful at this year, land-cress, claytonia, chervil and spinach.
Main salad harvests from now until early spring are undercover plants we popped in by mid-October, as you see in the polytunnel photo, also there is garlic growing in the middle of each central bed. Another Grow Together combination, book available 9th April.

Polytunnel salads 13th December, one more pick this year for Christmas sales and then we leave them to grow until the next pick in mid-January
Two things have really impressed me this year.
1 The overall huge harvest despite a very dry summer. We gave sufficient but not excessive water by hand, and the extra sunshine has ensured amazing growth. The total harvest was 610 kg / 1330 lb from 60.5 m², compared to an average of 380 kg per year, and the two previous highest totals of 458 kg.
2 The success of compost from the garden toilet, matured for 18-24 months in aerobic conditions. The other two beds receive half mushroom and half green waste compost.

Three strip drone 26th July all 2nd plantings including squash in the middle
This squash ground already gave turnips + greens this year in April and May, the respective weights were 12.39 kg forked, 14.03 kg no dig and 19.09 kg no dig with the toilet compost.
The squash plants went in on 8th May, interplanted between the outer rows of turnips. This combination features in my new book.
Another of the book’s 50 combos is carrots, interplanted mid-June with Brussels sprouts.
I sowed carrots 28th March, into soil with a 3 cm dressing of compost, applied December. It used to be said that this would make them fork, but it absolutely does not. Check out my Myths book for a liberating Christmas present!

Carrot harvest June 29th from around recently interplanted Brussels sprouts
The compost applied in December 2024 has also served to maintain fertility for the Brussels sprouts plants. Look how fantastically well they have grown, without any extra additions or feeds.

Brussels Brilliant has yellow outer skins but is eating really well
Over the past month, harvests have arrived in the top shed to store. It’s an uninsulated building and in this climate that works. Everything in the photo can survive slight freezing.

The vegetable store in December has beetroot, celeriac, Chinese cabbage and radicchio
Please check out the No Dig Global map, which is live again, after we switched web hosts. It’s well populated, and you can feature there too.
I wish you the best of festive seasons!

Pink chicory looking festive


