Wednesday 28 November 2018

All very sad!

 It's all very sad at this time of year. The days are short and cold, and sometimes like this - wet and foggy!
Most of the vegetables have finished, and have been dug up and discarded, but there is still some purple sprouting broccoli which should yield in the spring. At the moment, I am digging leeks (which did very well, and should be OK in the ground over winter) and parsnips (which also did quite well, although all have many roots, and most are a very strange shape) and pulling the last of the carrots.
So it's down to manuring, adding compost and digging. I've done a lot, but there is still a bit to do, and some that can't be done until the 
remaining vegetables have finished. I've also finished putting chippings over the paths to a depth of 3 or 4 inches, and done most of the weeding, a never-ending chore!
Not much to report then. The next thing will be the purple sprouting broccoli, followed by (hopefully) a good strawberry crop, but as ever, it will all depend on the weather.

Friday 17 August 2018

Strawberries

Strawberries are perennials - they live for several years - and fruiting gets better until they are 3 or 4 years old. It is best to replace them then, to avoid decreasing yields. There are two ways of doing this, expensive and cheap, although the cheap method involves rather more labour. You can buy new plants, or you can propagate your own from the old plants. Today I started on the latter. After fruiting, strawberry plants put out runners, which is their method of vegetative reproduction. The new plant is part of the old, so will always come true, unlike the seeds, which can give variable plants depending on how they were pollinated. By August, each plant will have put out a number of runners. Some will just look like long tendrils, but small plants will be growing, and rooting themselves, along and at the end of, the runners. So I chose a dozen of the better looking runners and potted them up whilst still attached to the parent plant. These will root in the 3" pots that I used, and next spring can be cut off the parents and planted where I want them. The pots were sunk into the ground and watered well. All other runners were cut off and discarded. The small plants will take a year or two to establish and grow before they fruit as well as the older plants, but by growing on runners every year, the yield can be maintained. I also weeded the strawberry plot, which was long overdue!
Because of the dry weather - it did not rain at all for about 9 weeks, until 2 weeks ago - a lot of things either finished early or did not mature properly. Broccoli was a good example of this. Last year, it was excellent, with plump, tender heads, but this year it has basically gone to seed without heading up. Runner beans all came in a rush, but have stabilised somewhat now it is wetter. I have been watering courgettes nearly every day, and they have loved the weather. I grew an extra plant this year, but needn't have done so, as we now have more than 20 in the fridge, despite  using them every day, in one form or another! I've also been picking beetroot, spring onions, carrots and French beans. Nearly all my potatoes are in store, and I have started picking sweetcorn - delicious! They were 'knee high by the fourth of July' as they should have been, but they also love the hot weather, and have come very early, at least two weeks. All of my white onions are now drying off, but my red onions are a little bit later. It's our autumn show in 3 weeks time, but I suspect that nearly everything will have finished by then.

Wednesday 18 July 2018

Busy picking!

It's midsummer, and we have not had any rain at all for at least 6 weeks. Everything is parched, especially as the weather has been so hot. There are cracks in the soil that you can lose your hand in. Despite this, and only because I have been watering nearly every day, I have been harvesting a great variety of produce : potatoes (I dug all my Vivaldi a few weeks ago, but still have Sarpo Mira in the ground) courgettes, runner beans, French beans, carrots, lettuce, beetroot, cabbage and broccoli. Broad beans have just about finished - I have left a few pods on to mature for seeds - and peas never really started, despite me sowing them several times. Sweetcorn will be ready in a month or so, as will onions, some of which have already started bending over. Some of the excess produce - broad beans, runner beans - has gone in the freezer, but at the moment we could live on vegetables. There are lots of them, and they are so much better than what you can buy, being ultra-fresh, extremely tasty and grown without artificial inputs.

Monday 18 June 2018

The fruits of success

My first root of potatoes this year. These are Vivaldi - extremely tasty - and the yield is good. Very little slug damage so far, although no doubt this will change as the season progresses.
I am still picking strawberries. 23 lb so far, which is not bad, but nowhere near as good as last year's exceptional crop, when I had picked 48 lb at this stage. I have been replacing old plants with new, and I put some fertiliser down earlier in the year, so it is probably down to the lack of rain this year. I have watered them occasionally, but we need a lot more rain - the strawberries are forming but not swelling as much as last year.
Also picking broad beans when they are about finger sized, and eating them 'mange tout' rather than just the beans, which is delicious.
Yesterday I picked a cabbage as well. Not very large, but no damage whatsoever, and a half of it was plenty for the two of us.
I have, despite the weather, planted out both leeks and sweetcorn. These have all needed watering of course, but an early problem has arisen with the sweetcorn : one that has never happened before and that I was not expecting. There is a mole undermining them! I would rather not trap it (but I will happily trap any mice that come after the cobs) so will have to try to deter it. Apparently mothballs pushed down into their runs is quite effective (they don't like the smell) but if anyone has any better ideas ...

Thursday 7 June 2018

Ready for summer

Everything (nearly, more later) is growing well. The fine weather that was forecast actually happened, so I have nearly everything in the ground. The only things to go in now  are the leeks (still a bit small) and the sweetcorn.

I've started picking strawberries - just a few so far, and they are a week later than last year - and the first broad beans should be ready next week.

The one thing that is slow is the peas. I had zero germination early in the year, so bought a new pack of seed and tried again. A few have germinated, but seem to be really struggling. Disappointing, as they were excellent last year.

Of course, it wouldn't be England if I didn't complain about the weather. Yes, it's been warm, but rain has been lacking over the last few weeks, so I've had to water, especially the seeds and seedlings, quite regularly. Other than that, it's been weeding, of which there is always some to do!

Thursday 24 May 2018

2 weeks to strawberry time!

These are my strawberry plants, which look strong after our hard winter. A lot of the flowers have finished now, and there are small green fruits on every plant which should be ready in a couple of weeks. I put some blood, fish and bone fertiliser round the plants a month ago, and I also removed some of the older ones, and put wood chippings around each plant to hold the fruit off the ground. This is inside my mesh tent of course, to protect the fruit from the birds, and to allow me to put down slug pellets. The small plants that I grew from runners last autumn are all outside the tent - no room inside! The crop will undoubtedly be smaller than last year, but that was exceptional, and this year's looks perfectly adequate. It's been so dry recently that I even watered them, although we do have thunderstorms forecast.
My purple sprouting broccoli has now finished, but I was lucky to get any. The weather was so cold in the winter (down to -11°C) that some of the plants died, and heavy snow collapsed the tent that they were in, breaking others. But it's a super crop - very tasty, expensive in the shops, and at an otherwise lean time - and I shall certainly be growing it again.
I planted out some French beans - a little early, but the weather is forecast to be warm. I also have potatoes looking good, peas (very slow) strong cabbages, broccoli, broad beans (full of flower) onions and shallots.
In my 'hotbed' I have beetroot and lettuces coming up.
Still to come are runner beans, courgettes and sweetcorn.

Friday 6 April 2018

Early spring

This is the only thing ready for harvest. I put a wheelbarrow over my rhubarb, which protected it from the worst of the weather - it went down to -11°C last month.
Since my last post some months ago, I have planted out potatoes (not showing yet) and broad bean plants. I sowed some more in the greenhouse for planting out later, also some pea seeds, but the mice ate the lot! They also ate the beetroot and the shallots seeds that I planted! So now I have planted beetroot, lettuce and spring onion seeds in my hot bed, and some more peas and shallots in the greenhouse, but protected from mice this time. The hot bed is just a cold frame that I dug out, filled with manure, trod this down and covered with a layer of compost.
We had another couple of lots of snow in February and March, with very cold temperatures, so this spring is taking a while to get going. However, I now have mesh over 3 of my 4 vegetable beds. A bit inconvenient - the sides are only about 3 feet high, although the middle is about 7 feet - but it should at least keep the pigeons off. Any plants that need more protection will be covered with fine mesh, which should keep the pea moth and carrot fly off, if the weather ever warms up enough for them to grow!

Tuesday 23 January 2018

Cold and wet, but time to start!

Since my last posting, I have only been up to my plot a couple of times. We had snow in early December, and my tents caved in under the weight, so I have been doing a few repairs. Of course, I should have taken down the tents over winter, but it is a lot of work to put them back on in the spring. It is apparent that the very fine mesh that I was using on one plot let no snow through at all, so the damage there was very significant. I have taken this off and discarded it, and tidied up a bit. I shall replace it with a coarser mesh material in due course. This will keep off the birds and some of the butterflies etc, but not the smaller insects like carrot flies or pea moth. Perhaps I will cover these with a separate piece of fine mesh material? The coarse mesh will also not keep out the bees, so pollination of eg beans should be OK.
I have started potatoes chitting at home. They should be ready to plant out in March/April. I've also started off some onion sets in modules - I shall put some more out directly in due course if we have some warmer weather - and also planted some broad bean seeds in pots. Again, I shall sow some directly when we get some warmer weather. This should give me a succession, although the ones planted later always try to catch up! If I leave it a month, they will probably be about a week behind at harvest.