Wednesday 27 January 2021

Purchases Made for the Growing Season 2021

I made three deliciously satisfying orders in the last two weeks and now I must stop. I purchased the seeds from Green Vegetable Seeds, which is the business of Klaus Laitenberger who is very knowledgeable and sensitive to the particulars of the Irish climate. The rest were bought in Future Forests in Bantry, which is the most wonderful business and I will go no further than them for any of my trees, fruit and shrubs going forward. A lot of my existing seeds were grown and harvested in Skibbereen by Brown Envelope Seeds and others were generously free from GIY Ireland. Enjoy reading my additions to my inventory.





Trees

I focused on fruit and native trees and purchased everything bare root, which is cheaper and easier to transport.

1 x Irish Peach apple tree (I already have 1 x Bramley Seedling and 1 x Beauty of Bath)

2 x pear trees (1 x Concorde and 1 x Doyenne du Comice)

1 x Stella cherry tree (I already have 2 x Reginas)

2 x Hazel

2 x Hawthorn

2 x Sessile Oak

2 x Rowan


Shrubs

3 x honeysuckle

4 x holly

2 x wild rose

2 x dog rose


We have a lot of trees and shrubs in our garden but not many to be overly excited about. The Elder trees are extremely important and can be used by us, as well as the wildlife. We have some crab apple trees that haven't done too well the last two years we have lived here but last Spring was quite dry and windy so it might have affected the blossoming. Other trees did poorly last year also. We have lots of tall conifers (I think Leyland Cypress) which are great for privacy and wind protection as we are quite high and there is a (lightly used) lane running behind our garden. The view would be fabulous without them but I have to thank them for giving me an extremely sheltered area to grow food. There are lots of gaps and dead trees (conifers that were severely pruned before we came along) to one side of the garden and this is where I am concentrating on. I want to create a mixed native hedge that is good for wildlife. We have contoneaster in the front garden which supplies the bees with flowers in the summer and then produces berries in the winter that are very popular with blackbirds.


Soft Fruit

10 x Glen Ample raspberry canes (I already have 2 x Autumn Bliss)

10 x Elsanta strawberry crowns

1 x rhubarb


Vegetable Seeds/Tubers

Potatoes - Miranda for first earlies and Pink Fir Apple for maincrop

Tomato - Kalavrita

Spring onion - Ishikura Bunching

Parsnip - Javelin F1

Carrot - Chantenay Red Cored

Kale - Nero di Toscano

Courgette - Nero di Milano

Jerusalem Artichokes

Cucumber - Passandra F1


I already have garlic, broad beans and purple sprouting broccoli growing. 


My existing seed collection contains:

Leek - Solaise Blue

Pak choi - F1 Rubi and F1 Yuushou

Peas - Sugar Snap and Irish Green Pea

Carrot - Rodelika and Autumn King. I wasn't impressed with the flavour of my carrots this year so I am changing variety

Tomato - Sungold

Lettuce - Baby Gem and Mizuna

Beetroot - Detroit Globe 

Squash - no idea of variety, I harvested the seeds from a squash I bought at our local farm stall.

New Zealand Spinach - this was a staple of our meals all through the summer, autumn and early winter, until the frost killed it. It will grow as a perennial in mild climates. It is a very fleshy leaf that has to be cooked before eating as it contains oxalic acid. The reason I chose it over standard spinach that can be eaten raw is that it is the one spinach variety I can buy that is bred in Ireland, by Brown Envelope Seeds. Sacrifices for keeping it local!


So I have a lot of work ahead of me this year. I have been gardening long enough to know just how much work is involved in growing a wide range of vegetables. I won't be planting everything at the same time. I think I'll keep the details of the sowing times I have in mind for another post.

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