Another fairly full on weekend of gardening and harvesting. Blackcurrants and redcurrants are now being picked, from bushes which seem overburdened with fruit, trailing on the ground as here
I suspect this is to do with my having failed to prune them properly. Looking on the
RHS web site, this seems to be what I've missed:
prune new growth back to two buds in early summer to keep plants compact
Well, thanks to the dry weather, the fruit in contact with the earth isn't rotting, and the freezer is filling up.
It's also just about passing the peak of the raspberry picking, although there are still a good number of fruit yet to ripen
My neighbours also have autumn raspberries, which invade my garden, which will come later in the year.
The other soft fruit which I expect to come in a glut is mulberries, but that is only just showing signs of ripening
Somehow I thought they'd be ahead of this, but according to the RHS, August & September is their season.
We're also still getting fruit from the tayberry - nearly over - and the blackberry - which will go on for a few weeks yet.
Beans - runners and dwarf French - seems to be suffering from aphids, which I guess is due to the dry weather
although I notice that some other plotholders' runners are doing much better than mine. I think I'll just have to ask to find out possible reasons why.
Beetroots are doing OK
although occasionally they bolt, so these get pulled. A couple of Swiss chard plants also bolted this week, but they had a good number of leaves on them already, so they didn't go to waste.
The butternut squash is away, sending its shoots in all directions, including over the paths. They're quite effective ground cover plants when they get going, and previous years I've noticed the adventitious roots coming from the shoots, which presumably eases the physiological effort in getting water from the original point of planting when the shoot has reached too far. I'm also interested by how the plant, in effect, decides whether or not to invest in developing fruits, because of those which set, such as this
many will just die back, while others go on to mature. Somehow the plant must be reacting to the conditions it finds itself in.
The potatoes are also looking fairly healthy, although some of these
are a bit yellow. They were next to the broad beans, so would not have had as much sun, but I'd have thought they would have adjusted by now. Looking at neighbours' plots, I see they also have some variations in how healthy their potatoes are looking. Just one of those times when I'd like to have studies more plant science.
Of the more experimental crop on the plot, the Wahaca peppers are now flowering and setting fruits
and the chickpeas are also flowering
I also had a look at my apples, where I failed to do anything about codling moth, as a result of which there is a a little hole visible here where a grub will have got in
and which will have to be cut out and the apple cut up and cooked gently before bottling or freezing, rather than be stored whole. That was a Charles Ross. My other tree, a Discovery, seems overcrowded with fruit.
The natural 'June drop' has accounted for many,and I've been picking off some fruit which are never going to come to anything, but I suspect I should he more ruthless, and systematic. OTOH, given the height of the tree - maybe 20' - I've not going to be able to reach everywhere.
Back home, I noticed that I have my first courgette coming
which isn't that big a deal, since I noticed many more in my neighbours' garden which I was watering last week while they were away. The difference will be that I didn't get them in in time. The problem about growing courgettes is that within a couple of days they grow into virtual marrows, which don't taste anything like as nice, so you have to keep watching them. That's one reason I'm growing this in a planter bag in my garden, not on the plot.
I also noticed today that my first tomatoes (Gardeners' Delight), in the greenhouse, are ripening up
and I've lifted all the turnips grown in a planter bag as mini veg (they did taste good) leaving the line of carrots in the same bag to have their chance in the sun
and some chicken wire to keep out cats.
I also, at the third attempt, have some healthy parsley - the two previous times it having been eaten by slugs or snails. To this time it gets some special treatment
Much of the morning today was spent trying to bring order to a corner of the garden behind my compost bins which had become a sort of glory hole for bits of plastic, polystyrene, metal and wood I'd imagined at one point could be used in the garden, but was being overrun with ivy and hop. This is how it's looking now
with flower pots graded by size; I wonder how long that will last. And below, showing old pallets being used as racks
and the compost bins full to over flowing, and the paving slabs in front visible for the first time in years.
In the greenhouse, I have a couple of healthy enough looking cuttings of fig (Brown Turkey) and vine (Black Hamburgh)
even though I've no good idea what I'm going to do with them - there may be a space for the vines in my front garden, although I'm also thinking of getting a plum there - maybe more another week.
Regarding flowers for cutting, I felt I'd had enough sweet peas, so these are being allowed to go to seed
but suddenly flowering heads are appearing on the gladioli
Last photos are of the pear I have trained against a south facing wall, with three varieties grafted onto the same tree. Nothing like as many fruit as last year, but still some
Conference
and William Bon Chretien
