How to grow your own peas at home featuring my two favourite methods. Get your copy of How to Grow Food: https://geni.us/HowToGrowFood

Top varieties:
Alderman (Tall)
Telephone (Tall)
Llanover (Medium Height)
Hurst Greenshaft (Medium Height)
Meteor (Dwarf)
Oregaon Sugar Pod (Mangetout)
Nairobi (Sugar snap)

#gardeningtips #growyourownfood #vegetablegarden

45 Comments

  1. Great Informative video Captain, just like always looking forward to the next one. Wonderful growing and harvesting season to everyone, We got this! Im already ahead with so much seedlings going. The season should be definitely bountiful!

  2. Thank you! Iโ€™ve been sewing scrawny for years, so I am definitely going to try this method. My dog loves pea pods, so sheโ€™s going to be very happy to have a beautiful crop to eat this year with me!

  3. Lol..I was thinking the same (re "it's only been 3 days") regarding recent plantings. Just a few days later..trays of green!

  4. I'm sure you recommended Oregon Sugar pods a few years back… I dont ever want to grow any others as they are AMAZING! cheers.

  5. Iโ€™ve been gardening for years and this will be the first time growing peas. Just never got around to them. Really looking forward to my first harvest.

  6. If you do not shell the peas how do you sift out the ones with maggots in them? The bane of pea growing.
    Seeds are silly expensive for what they are. To get a supermarket frozen bag of peas takes a lot.
    Interesting you sow all in containers. Normal old days was seed sprinkled into a wide shallow trench directly in the ground.

  7. Hi – Would you share where we might purchase you seed starting container? It looks very sturdy unlike some I have bought. Thanks so much. PS I live in Oregon and am very proud of the Oregon Sugar Pod Peas ๐Ÿ™‚

  8. This seems like a lot of trouble and takes time.
    I plant my peas in a 3 shallow parallel trenches directly into the ground at the end of October. Each pea seed is about 2cm apart. They germinate and then grow through the winter into spring. I re-seed any places where they didn't germinate after 2 weeks. By February they are often over 2 metres tall. I use a vertical net for support. They will suffer slight frost damage but recover quickly. As long as their support is strong they will usually be OK in snow as long as it isn't too heavy. I get massive crops and my freezer is often full of peas. Save a few late pods for next years seed.

  9. I have always sown my pea seeds separately, although only two or three inches apart…multi-sowing will be my new process beginning now, because I can never have too many peas! ๐Ÿ˜Š

  10. I have been planting up the a border at my new place ( in Central France ) and noticed peas coming up. I have been feeding the birds so thought maybe there were peas in it too. If so, any idea what variety they could be?

  11. Brilliant video ๐Ÿ‘Œ๐Ÿฝmy favourite as well is suger pod peas ๐Ÿซ› I like to use toilet rolls as pots I multi sow 3-4 peas per toilet roll get some mega harvest

  12. I use toilet roll tubes, the wee compostable cups and instant soup boxes. I avoid module trays if I can.

    A week ago, indoors I planted a mixture (labeled) of peas, french and runner beans. Oregon, Red Emperor, Hurst and a few others I cant remember. They're doing ok.

    I forgot about suga snap and mange tout, thanks for the timely reminder.

    As a wee experiment I soaked, sprouted and planted Batchelors "Bigga" dried peas that I'd had in the back of the cupboard since the stone age.

    You know the one's, rock solid and great for catapult ammo or, if you really have to be an adult, for soup and stews?

    Those are going absolutely gangbusters!!!

    Thanks for the video. ๐Ÿ‘

  13. In Candaa the tall telephone and alderman are considered the same variety, not that easy to find. I've been trying to find tall growing peas and besides the alderman there is champion of england heritage seed which I can get from Manitoba, but that is all. Any recommedations please? I do better with shelling peas than sugar snaps etc. I think pea breeding is dominated by the frozen pea industry, not surprisingly. Fresh peas are sublime.

  14. For small gardens/balcony I recomend 'De Grace' ( sugarsnap). Only 60cm/2ft. Nice and fast for my greenhouse in march. Ready to pull out when hight tomatoes and sweet pepper takes over in may. ( im like 100 km west of Stockholm , Sweden so little more cold than Wales I suppose)

  15. Dear Huw – a hint for you. Instead of pushing into each module individually, fill the tray, and use an identical tray to gently press the mix. Quick and easy. BTW, why not just sow direct into the garden – which is what I do?

  16. I like to grow the telephone pea, because im in my mid 60s, and the climbing peas are easier on my back and knees.Since I don't yet have a greenhouse, they will again go directly into the garden. Here in northern Ohio I plant them mid March. Also the turnips, beets radishs, and cool weather greens. I am SO EXCITED to get out there to play in the dirt again. It's been a too long, cold winter. Thanks for sharing Huw.

  17. Wow I love peas! can't believe I have been growing them wrong, actually less effective! Can't wait to get your book, ordered it a long time ago, excited, I also love the Oregon peas too! Thanks so much for this great teaching video!

  18. Iโ€™ve not been successful in pea growing in my veg garden as something always eats the seedlings but Iโ€™ve now got an allotment. I was hoping to sow directly but maybe Iโ€™ll get them started in the greenhouse before taking them to the allotment

  19. Just got my copy of the book yesterday
    I already did peas last year and regret not sowing more densely
    Also they were clinging to anything they could ๐Ÿ˜‚including the nearest broad beans. My tepee was 5 sticks with string, maybe that was the issue
    I got now some growing in the greenhouse in a mushroom tray and inside a plastic box to prevent my rodent friends coming at night. I open it during sun hours

    Looking forward to tuck into the book on Saturday evening. I think the chapter where you explain how to calculate how many plants to grow could be the best of all
    And of course the yummy recipes for sure

    โค

  20. I am doing this for the first time this year. I normally direct sow the sugar snap peas in the raised bed the first week of March, but for the past two years we had a cold & wet period after the peas were planted. Because of that germination was delayed, and many of the seeds rotted in the garden. Both years I had to re-sow the peas to get a growth which resulted in a delayed and smaller harvest. This year I planted the seeds in module trays in the greenhouse, and they should be sprouting next week. I'm hoping the transplanting of them in the raised bed goes well.

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