Friday, January 07, 2011
A New Home
Thursday, July 08, 2010
First Potatoes
Dug up the first of our early potatoes this week – starting with the Home Guards. These have been looking increasingly floppy in the heat, although they don’t appear to be particularly diseased, I think they’re just reaching the end, and aren’t particularly enjoying all the heat!
Anyway, only a single plant dug up (on the basis that “underground” is probably the ideal storage conditions for potatoes right now), with a slightly disappointing yield of just over half a kilo – although there may be a few more potatoes that I missed, as I didn’t want to go digging wildly around and disturb the neighbouring plants.
Absolutely delicious, egg-sized and below new potatoes – and they go wonderfully with the freshly picked sugarsnaps!
Saturday, June 26, 2010
A Belated Update
Our early crop potatoes have been earthed up, and are just starting to struggle into flower. We’ve already dug up one of the ‘rogue’ potato plant and enjoyed some delicious (mostly quails-egg sized) new potatoes; I’ll probably finish cropping them before moving onto our intentionally grown ones!
The greenhouse is now filled with it’s normal huge tomato plants, all in furious flower and the first fruits on the Marmande are already set. The gerkins have produced their first fruit which have been duly pickled, and even the sweet peppers are slowly growing, although not as rapidly as I would have expected by now.
Out in the garden itself, just about all our courgette plants have at least one small courgette forming up; we now have three rows of sugarsnap peas (sowed at roughly monthly intervals) and already have the first row producing meal-sized crops. The outdoor tomato plants – dwarfs compared to their greenhouse companions, sown at the same time! – are also starting to flower.
Our leeks are growing happily, our broccoli has survived the interest of the local sky-rats – although I noticed this evening that they have now been found by cabbage whites instead. Grr. Sweetcorn is growing quietly and without fuss, as it always does.
Our raspberries have been rather confused by the odd start to the year; a couple of the (autumn!) canes flowered early and have started setting fruit. Quite whether they will sort themselves out enough to fruit at the right time as well, only time will tell. We’ve acquired both wild and conventional strawberry plants over the last few months and if I can stop the damn birds scoffing everything before it ripens, we may even eat some one day…
Finally, there are a couple of rows of lettuce and carrots lurking under our super-bargain mini polytunnels from the Pound Shop. And that, I think, is all our crops summed up!
Monday, May 17, 2010
Almost There!
The practical upshot of this is that we have now, for the first time ever, reached a stage where the entire garden is now cultivated - with the exception of a very small square yard which is currently filled with wild flowers such as forget-me-nots. The original plan was to dig all that up as well, but as I've been working in the garden I've noticed it tends to be covered in bees and other good insects so it seems foolish to stop attracting them in!
Anyway, as a result of some fairly furious work, all the maincrop potatoes are now in; we've also uncovered (over the last few weeks) another half-dozen or so "rogue" potatoes dotted about the place. Now, I understand the ones which are appearing in ground we grew potatoes in last year, but there are a couple in places where I'm sure we haven't had potatoes for 3 or 4 years! Not sure quite how that happened, but I'm happy to take free crops when I find them...
A lot of our seeds have finally made it outside - the courgettes, broccoli and leeks are all now in the ground and hopefully enjoying the warmer, wetter weather we're finally getting. All of our various fruit canes (raspberries, gooseberry and tayberry) are looking good, with the exception of the raspberry from Poundland, which seems to have been dead. Oh well, it was only a pound!
We also picked up some free wild strawberries from a friend; at first I was pretty convinced that none of them had survived the transplant, but I think at least half of them are now showing signs of new life so hopefully we should get even more fruit there.
The one slight disappointment is our rhubarb plant. It seemed to be initially happy, quickly putting out a third leaf and looking quite content - but for what seems like the last month it hasn't grown any more, and looks somehow 'flat'. I'm hoping that it's just down to our recent burst of cold weather, and now that spring is restarting it will leap back into life, but I'm not confident. Still, our current plan is just to leave it alone for this year, and hope that something happens.
Sunday, April 25, 2010
25 April Update
A couple of days back he potted some of the tomato seedlings into grow bags in the greenhouse and the gherkin plants were potted into a large rectangular window-sill pot, also to live in the greenhouse.
Today we could see the first tiny green and purple leaves of the potato plants pushing out and also some teeny tiny shoots from the polytunnelled sugarsnap peas.
Pete planted out the sweetcorn seedlings. After last year's disaster when I'd asked him to cover them, he'd pooh-poohed the idea, only to see them eaten and destroyed by vermin overnight, he duly covered these beautiful speciments in a cunningly jerryrigged metal hoop and netting protective cover.
He planted several marigolds in different areas of the garden, to attract insects, especially hover flies which eat many of the nasties.
And some busy lizzies for colour.
He also popped some sunflower seeds we'd had lying around for eons into the ground behind the apple tree (which has lots of leaves and a few tiny buds already).
And he planted some courgette seeds in the heated propagator, in the conservatory.
Oh and lots of weeding, clearing away more of the bolting cabbages, emptying out the old grow bags from last year and general maintenance work.
Seedlings of purple sprouting broccoli, lettuce and various herbs are looking lively in the greenhouse too. And the pepper and chilli plants are growing fast too.
Pictures to be added later.