Monday 26 October 2020

Garden Diary: 26th October 2020

 My outdoor nursery looks like this:


It contains mainly flowers with lots of calendula and wallflowers in red, white and purple:



I have pak choi in pots:




Because the ones I put in the ground ended up like this:



The vegetable plot looks like this at the moment:




We are eating spinach, carrots, various herbs and leeks:



The leeks are not as long as I'd hoped, I obviously didn't earth them up as much as I should have.


My purple sprouting broccoli was decimated by the caterpillars of the White butterfly but they have come back nicely so I am hopeful of a harvest:






This week I've planted some of my garlic, Iberian Wright and Messidrome. This patch was previously used for peas, and I've been adding seaweed and compost from emptied pots since the peas were removed. The soil is looking really nice, with tons of earthworms. Garlic is a hungry plant. I still have quite a bit to plant. I won't do it all together, but will interplant among all the beds. I find a polyculture bed, which mixes varieties of veg, herbs, fruits and flowers goes a long way to reduce pest damage, as it increases the likelyhood of the presence of predatory insects. It also looks great.

Getting ready:



In place:



Covered back over and fallen branches used to make a boundary so I know where to weed:




Covered with my own hay from my grass meadow:


 


And topped off with a thick layer of seaweed. This will protect the soil and prevent it from washing away and leeching minerals. It will also decompose slowly adding organic matter to the soil.




I've also planted some broad beans in two different beds. I had great success with my beans this year, not least because of the hard work I put into them.


In the front garden I have done a lot of work which is completely unseen at this stage. I have planted loads of spring bulbs and wildflower seeds and will let the grass grow long around them. I have also made a little structure using stones and soil and have planted a little cutting of campanula. Here is what it looks like presently, but I am anticipating success by next spring/summer:




And that's all folks. Till next time..

Monday 5 October 2020

Garden Diary: 4th October 2020

 Really need to do this more often...




Final tomatoes are ripening on the plant in the sunny porch. I am very happy with my harvest this year considering I only planted my seeds at the end of May. It was not by choice as seeds were hard to come by, but it was much easier than planting on a propagating mat in February and minding them like babies for months. The most satisfying thing about the tomatoes was having enough ripe ones, all at the same time, to bring a little lunchbox full when visiting my family. I grew sungold this year, which are nice, but next year I want to do big red lumpy tomatoes and forego the cherries.




I grew a very flamboyant carrot! The variety is Autumn King and they are very tasty. I also grew Rodelika, which I found to be a little soapy in taste, but still palatable and they gave me nice long carrots.  Bonus points for the Rodelika is that they came from organically grown Irish seeds (Brown Envelope Seeds) and I think origin is as important as taste. I planted far too few carrots however. I took my time preparing the ground before sowing (although the photo would say otherwise) but totally underestimated how many carrots we consume. I don't like to completely plant a bed full of the one crop, and rather mix all types of plants together. This reduces pest and disease but leads me to underplant as it is more difficult to keep track of what you are planting, and you end up losing crops to shade from overhanging vegetables. Better design is needed next year.




I am happy with my leeks. I make sure to earth them up regularly and applied plenty of seaweed. They took a battering in one of the storms but have much recovered, since taking this photo. They look spectacular on a frosty day so I am not dreading the winter at all, thinking about how they will look. 




I planted a mix of salad leaves, mizuna, little gem and both a green and a red variety of pak choi, at the end of August, and they are doing excellent. I've been pulling leaves off for my sandwiches and burgers and am not getting slug damage. I use no pellets or pesticides of any sort.






I've preserved my cooking apples and beetroot into various jars including spiced apply chutney, apple sauce, beetroot and apple chutney and pickled beetroot. This is really the main reason I grow fruit and veg. I love relishes and chutneys and anything vinegary. I've lots of recipes under the Preserving/Canning tab at the top of the page.




A lot of my energy is now going into growing flowers for next year. In the last month I have sown lots of wildflowers (poppies, cornflower, calendula, yellow rattle, scabious...) among my grass. I have also sown sweet peas, Californian poppies, delphiniums, black eyed Susan, verbena, wallflowers and others in pots and will overwinter in my porch. I really have to get a table as I will not have enough floor space. I've lots of spring bulbs planted in the ground and in pots and cannot wait to see how they look as I really tried to create designful combinations. It's hard when you are arranging bulbs and trying to envision them as flowers. So exciting and full of expectations though.

That's the most of it. I am awaiting my delivery of seed garlic and onions and have a bed prepared for them. I am also anticipating bare root tree season so I can add about 10 trees to the garden, a mix of fruit and native including but not limited to hazel, hawthorn, pear, cherry and apple.

Till next time (hopefully within a month!)