and here my burn pile for sometime this winter
I'm also still feeling sorry for myself, with my shoulder still painful. I have an appointment at Lewisham Hospital this week, so hope to learn how long before I am am back to normal. Today, just testing the strength of a piece of string by pulling it apart caused a jarring which led to pain lasting a minute or two. Digging I have to be very careful to avoid any similar abrupt movements, say when a clump of roots eventually comes up. But for this, more of those weeds would have joined these in my compost bins,
and I might have got round to turning them so they compost better, but I have not.
OK, enough of the self pity.
I got round to putting more vine eyes in the walls of my shed so that I could tie in the canes for next year's tayberries and blackberries, on the west side
and south and east respectively
I also noticed that the blackberry seems to be able to grow from underground stems as well; in this picture,
the dead looking stump in the middle is from where I planted it originally, some years ago, before putting up the new shed, with paving slabs right up against it. It responded first by coming up about a foot to the left, from which this years crop came, and today I noticed it's also coming up a foot to the right.
I also got round to cutting back this year's raspberry fruiting canes, leaving just these for 2016
and then decided to work in the gooseberry hedge idea I had a couple of years ago, when I found some low gooseberry branches which had trailed on the ground had rooted. If they are so good at rooting, why not use them to make a potager style hedge, where previously I'd edged my plot with thyme and hyssop.
This year, for the first time, these new plants had fruit, but also started to grow out over the path
but rather than just cut the longest stems, I dug a hollow either side along the line of the plant, and bent the branch down into it,
holding it down with a peg
then covering over while making sure the ends were above ground
There are also some other prunings in this, which I'm going to try to grow as cuttings. In the interests of science, I'll try some with hormone rooting powder, and others without.
There is still produce coming back, including the unfeasibly large squashes
which we're just hoping are edible. Those chillies are, and very hot, and more where they came from
Chillies are definitely worth growing - far more, I'd say than other members of the same family, such as sweet peppers or aubergines. The other things in the previous photo are chick peas - not really worth the effort - and chard, which is always worth growing.
Another relative success this year has been the leeks, which I grew in the garden,
rather than the allotment, where by this time, in previous years, the outer leaves were starting to go a bit slimey - I guess some fungal disease which had got in the soil. Looking it up, in the hope of finding out how long I'll need to avoid planting leeks in my allotment, it seems that the disease is Leek rust, since I also used to get these yellow patches

That article doesn't give a time before growing again, but it doesn't sound as if it will need to be too long, so maybe next year leeks in another bit of my garden, and then back to the plot.
As for the salad crops by the kitchen, the nasturiums seem to be taking over