Sunday 26 April 2009

Mixed fortunes


The first worry of the new year has arrived. The tomato seeds planted have failed to germinate. One solitary wispy stem pointed its way out of the tray with all its siblings pots being empty, the still-born seeds hidding under the compost. These were Mr Fothergill's Red Cherry tomato seeds are are perhaps not hardy enough for up here. They have been hastily replaced by a tray of Moneymaker courtesy of Lidl. Perhaps it will not be too late for a crop of tomatos this year.

On the positive side there are signs of life in the garden. The Garlic has sprouted and stubby green thumbs stick up through the soil. The beetroot has given a small red band of germinbating seedlings, too small to photograph without a serious macro lens. The onions are looking healthy and pretending to be a bumper crop. Fingers crossed.

Monday 13 April 2009

Last days of freedom

Potatos and more

 

The last day of the holidays and back to work again tomorrow. Fortunately the weather has held up and a lot was possible in a few days. In addition to the first potatos going in (Sante) we have also managed to get spinach, fennel and broad breans in. In the potting shed (living room and Daniel's bed room) cauliflower, tomatos, courgettes, celeriac, runner beans, cabbage, kale, celery and peppers are all hopefully germinating. On the floor the maris piper and sante seed potatos are chitting.


I estimate that so far this year we have spent approximately £28 on seeds. This makes Aldi's seeds at 35p per packet very attractive and we will need to look at them. We have also registered at the BBC's Dig It site for 5 free packets of seeds.


At the momemnt the garden looks quite good and thanks to the www.growveg.com software I am able to show a schematic of where we are.

OUTER

Sunday 12 April 2009

Dove of Peace


We have been very fortunate with the weather during this Easter weekend. Both days have been warm and sunny, blue skies with white clouds and not a drop of rain. Perfect weather to get a lot done in the garden.

An unusual Easter visitor was a dove which spent some time in the hens' run while the girls were out helping me turn over the ground. When the chickens' discovered that they had an intruder they became quite aggressive and wasted no time in letting the dove know that it had to leave their patch. It was comical watching the hens strut aggressively, pushing out their breasts and pushing the intruder around the hen run.





While looking for advice I came across a very useful site. Allotment Growing is a very full site packed with helpful information and active fora. In one of the fora there was discussion on growing beans and positive discussion about the Munty Frame as an alternative to more usual supports. 34000 people have read the thread and it is difficult to argue with that amount of positive opinion. So to that end we gathered up our sticks, canes, twine and waste frames and had a bash. The end result looks quite good and seems strong and stable.

However, time will tell.

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Friday 10 April 2009

A new year, a new intention



Good Friday seems as good a day as any to declare that spring has started. We are now officially off on our horticultural adventure. This will be similar to last year, but unlike 2008, in 2009 we expect things to be subtly different. We intend that this year we will actually do it properly. This year we will grow a full range of vegetables and even amongst them those villains of last summer - beetroots and cauliflowers. These are described as "easy" vegetables in the books but they have defeated us two years running. They have either bolted (beetroot) or just failed (cauliflower). This year will be different. They should have suited our acid soil but we were only playing last year - this year it will be very different.

In out new, professional, industrious and energetic 2009 these prior failures will not be tolerated. We will not be happy with peas, beans and potatos. We will have leeks as thick as a baby's arm, beetroots like footballs, carrots like rolling pins, courgettes in abundance, salads you could drown under, onions that will make our neighbours' eyes water and cauliflowers as big as your head. We have the seeds, the ground, the intention. All we lack is the skill and knowledge - what can go wrong ?

Today the row of garlic went in and two rows of beetroot as its neighbour. This is later than last year so hopefully less chance of bolting - we will see.