Tuesday, 15 October 2019

15th - 31st October


15th October
I have painted the front wall and its brightness is startling. I have also half filled up a wooden box pallet with soil to be a large container for hopefully a Japanese maple to grow there. I think the stunning red leaves will look good. I have also make a raised bed edging out of pallet wood that goes from the far end of our bay window, in front of this box, along in front of the newly white wall and along the front wall. I’ll fill this with compost and soil and it will be for sowing poppies and cornflowers next spring. What with the fuchsias and grasses already there, the front garden will still be a small area but one that is full of plants and colour.

21st October
The rain stopped after the last entry and we have continued to enjoy mild and dry weather. Sadly, the courgettes have finished. I managed to pick about a dozen in the last week that were about finger size but now the plants are shrivelled up, damaged by cold nights. Now that the plants have shrivelled I have found another butternut squash plant weighing about a pound – it’s always good to have these little bonuses. In the garden, I have harvested a couple of small portions of rocket and the hanging baskets are still managing to provide a display of colour from the purple surfinas plus the salvias are still in bloom and they make a good impact against the silvery cinerarias.


31st October
Yesterday we returned from a family holiday to just south of Bude in Cornwall, not that far from where we were last year. It had a wood burning stove in the lounge so we took 2 large bags of logs from the garden that I split here one evening and that proved to be a roaring success. We also paid another visit to the Eden Project – again it was a delight and an inspiration. The boys were surprised to see a display of cotton plants and a cotton harvest in the Mediterranean biome. One said ‘It doesn’t really come from the plants does it Daddy?’ That kind of comment is fine from a 5 year old but when my wife let it out that she never realised it ‘grew on trees’ my eyes rolled in their sockets!

So today we took a trip to the allotment where I pulled some leeks and harvested all the carrots. A lot were damaged by carrot root fly but we still managed a pretty impressive haul considering I did nothing more than sow the seeds and watered a little. One carrot was 13 oz in weight. The calabrese plants are still producing side shoots and I cut off well over a large head’s worth. The sweet peas are still flowering and my 10 headed sunflower had all heads in bloom. It was magnificent to see such a bright yellow ball of sunshine on the last day of October amid so much end of season deadness. Before the holiday I took a couple of photos of the sunflower and I will enter them into next year’s show if they repeat the photograph category. On that note I really need to plan a time to come down and do an autumn clean up.

Back home after the holiday it seems that the salvias have come out even more.

Next post: 27th Nov

Tuesday, 1 October 2019

1st - 7th October

1st October
I’ve lost track of exactly what I’ve done and when but today I picked 1 large and 2 fist sized butternut squashes as well as 4 small courgettes and 1 small red pepper from the allotment. On Tuesday I picked 9 courgettes – still going well late in September! I also picked another decent posy sized bunch of sweet peas. It makes it all the more sad as I could have been picking sweet peas at home were it not for lack of watering while we were away.

At home I have made no progress on clearing away the lilac tree which my wife is in favour of, nor of the purchasing the 3 silver birches, which she is not in favour of! One birch tree would be a good compromise but where can I buy just one? The good priced ones on the internet come in multiple batches and singular trees from nurseries are pricey – and large.

3rd October
Today was the first autumnal weather day. The Indian summer has gone and rain threatened all day although it merely stayed dull. My 5 year old had a birthday party to go to this afternoon so we had no trips or outings planned which meant I could tackle the job of tidying the shed. Before that I mowed the lawn and then it was the main event of the day. Out came everything, some of it got put in a rubbish sack, then the remainder went in again in a neater manner. All this was achieved with the help of the 2 year old who had a great time ‘painting’ things with a small paintbrush I found. I had time at the end to cut back the fennel and saved some seed heads to harvest the seed, as well as the stems which are partly hollow and will make a good overwintering place for solitary bees. Filled with the satisfaction of a good days’ work, I planned to put white masonry paint on the front wall that divides us from our neighbour as a good background for poppies and/or cornflowers in the front garden next year. I’ll try to make some edging too for a small level raised bed.

 5th October
The autumnal weather continues, now with light continuous rain reaching heavy at times. So I decided that the butternut squashes weren’t going to ripen anymore let alone grow any larger so I harvested them. I now have 3 large ones and about half a dozen small ones the size of my fist weighing a total of 7.8kgs. I also found a large cauliflower that must have dramatically increased in size whilst my back was turned, 3 small red peppers, so small I think they might be chillies (a few years ago there were reports of nurseries mislabelling chillies as peppers) and 1 small courgette. It won’t be long before all summer vegetables have finished and it will be onto the carrots and leeks then later the sprouts and broccoli.

Another rain-fuelled decision was that I would not be able to paint the wall!

7th October
Today was our third day of rain and it got heavier than yesterday at times. The gardens definitely need it. My lawn looks worse than at any time in the summer and the vegetables require a really good drink. I just long to get out and cut down that lilac tree, make those raised beds and paint that wall.

Next post: 15th Oct

Saturday, 14 September 2019

14th - 25th September

14th September
A wonderfully varied harvest from the allotment brought in 7 courgettes, 5 sweet corns, 4 pumpkins and 1 cauliflower – I stumbled on that by accident as it was well hidden (well, the curd was beneath the foliage!).

I guess since the last leeks went in and the sprouts were planted, the rest of summer and early autumn are the good times on the allotment. Whilst winter maturing vegetables become established and grow, you gradually harvest the others, either the cut and come again ones like courgettes or the one time a season ones such as the sweet corn and pumpkins. The sprouts are now well established and putting on a growth spurt and the leeks are as good as anybody’s and that encourages me. The best thing is that now is not the time for weeding. I have membrane down so no weeding is necessary on the beds, and the long grass around the edges is not troubling anyone so it can wait until tidy up time a little later. Good times indeed. The wet summer also meant that watering was not a chore. That being said I did partake in some watering today for the squashes and courgettes as we have had some great late summer sunshine and a good dry spell for a while now.

Back home my garden tidy up continued with me scrubbing the paddling pool clean as well as the tarpaulin that it was sat on. These were put out way back in late spring, used on one day, and have just sat around getting dirty ever since. It wasn’t even me who got them out – or used them!

15th September
In gardening, like comedy, timing is very important and mine was displayed yesterday in watering some of the allotment exactly 24 hours before the rain came followed by a deluge which went on for some hours. Ah well.

 17th September
I was just taking a sheet of cardboard to the allotment and simply dropping it off when I spotted some calabrese re-sprouting as side branches from the main stalks. I collected the equivalent of a large head and we had them for dinner – nice! I also picked the last pumpkin and a small posy of sweet peas.

Later on at home I was to be found on my hands and knees by the strawberry bed clearing away straw and dead leaves and stems and some runners, then uprooting some weeds in front of the privet hedge. I had cleared away the sweet pea canes yesterday as well as those from all along the fence panels. The compost bin is beginning to receive its autumn glut of spent plants.

20th September
The day of the allotment show and competition. Alas, I forgot all about it until it was too late. I had 2 lots of 3 onions to show plus I could have dug up some leeks and maybe shown some sweet peas. Great!

24th September
The Indian summer continues with warm dry days that I would have wished were the make up of our summer holidays. There is a chill in the mornings with some condensation on the cars and heavy dew on the grass but otherwise summery. Today was the day I could finally mow the lawn again. Our new mower is here and I set to work getting the grass cut and the compost bin almost filled up. Mind you, that will soon rot down.

25th September
I finished pruning the strawberry plants of dying leaves and runners and found 28 new plants that I have transplanted to a nursery area at the other end of the border. I have cleared away the straw and the place looks really tidy. I also gave the lavender plants a trim as they have finished flowering.

I was able to collect a decent posy of sweet peas from the allotment. I have been told by one of the allotment committee that I would have won a prize for my onions had I entered!

Next post: 1st Oct

Monday, 9 September 2019

4th - 9th September

4th September
Eight more courgettes from the allotment and today I also picked 2 cobs of sweetcorn which I blanched and froze.

5th September
After the family inspected the allotment plot we went over to my parents where Dad has allowed me to dry off my onions in his greenhouse. I peeled off the outer, flaking and dirty skins and filled a bag of these for my compost bin but 3 bags full of onions, and I also have a load back home as well making a total of 151. Great!

7th September
Only 2 courgettes today but another 2 sweetcorn cobs. This time, we had them for dinner. My wife has never had them this fresh before and she was amazed at how different they taste. A satisfied customer!

9th September
Yesterday the weather suddenly picked up and felt like summer – that’s at least the second time this year! There has been talk of an Indian summer – there always is when we’ve had a poor one, I think it is people’s wishful thinking for some compensation before winter - well, we had an afternoon of it anyway, and today was quite warm and sunny too so maybe autumn has been postponed although leaves are changing colour.

This afternoon I finally started to wash the flower pots and trays. I took an old bowl of soapy water and one of clean water out to the garden and set about the task. I got quite a few cleaned up as well as sorting out what plastic items have to go in the bin and which ones I can recycle – they needed cleaning as well. So there were many yoghurt pots and plastic cups to wash as I can take them to a local plastics recycling plant (our council doesn’t take all types of plastic). I even washed out the compost bags as they can be recycled too. Basically this place I’ve found will take any plastic as long as you can positively identify what type of plastic it is. They all have a number 1-6 (7 can’t be recycled) according to the specific type. A lot of plastic these days has a triangular recycle symbol on it with either the number in question of the initials of the type so that you can identify it. We keep a large black bin bag in the conservatory and put all our plastics in there that we can identify and when I’ve got too many of these bags knocking about in the shed I get out 6 boxes, label them for my 5 year old and I pull out the items from the bin bags and read the number, give it to him and he runs off and puts it in the box. He loves it. Then I bag up, label and take them to the plant. A good thing is that I can take supermarket carrier bags there so although we now have these bags for life, I don’t have any guilt if I ever go shopping without one as I can take a normal carrier bag and know I will be recycling it when it is not needed anymore.

Back to the garden. I really want to get it tidied before winter this year including all pots and baskets and trays cleaned, sorted and stored where they will not be in my way. I need to tidy the shed again and burn off some of the wood I have stored as I keep collecting but still don’t have a wood burning stove – alas! I want to whitewash the front wall to the left of the front garden and make a small raised bed in front of it to grow poppies and/or cornflowers next year which will be set off well against the wall. It was white once but needs re-doing. I also want to implement the idea I had last year of planting 3 silver birch trees where the lilac stands now. I had the plan just too late last year to have the time to clear the old tree and prepare the ground but made a mental note that this September I would do that, so I have to cut down and grub up the tree, and its roots, and prepare 3 holes for delivery in October. In planting bulbs for the spring I will transfer bluebell bulbs to around the birch trees as they will be better there I think. I already have quite a few bluebells on that left side but I could really make a good show of it if I concentrated them there.

Next post: 14th Sept

Tuesday, 20 August 2019

August

1st August
Well it may be August but the rain continues. A constant light drizzle all day. Of course the good thing is that I don’t have to do any watering at the allotment. Imagine how many trips to the trough I would need to water the entire plot, and to have to do it maybe 2-3 times a week if there was a serious hot, dry spell. On our travels today we stopped at the allotment for courgettes and picked 5 including the first 2 of the yellow ones and yes, 2 of them found their way on to our plates for dinner, as well as 2 older ones. We are easily managing to consume them as we go, but then not every plant is in the full swing of production yet – that will probably happen whilst we are away. We leave on Thursday for 2 weeks in the Lake District and I can foresee a huge glut of overly large marrows by the time we get back. I would like someone to pick them while we are away but I really want to have an accurate record of how many have been picked for my records (how sad am I?) so I will have to ask and instruct someone reliable.

I haven’t really mentioned much about the garden for a while maybe because due to the weather we have not been spending much time in it. The flowers are doing well. The silver leafed cinerarias are generally coming along fine, and as for the salvias, some are in a good bloom whilst others have nibbled-off tips. The ageratums are in bloom and they are not as large as the picture on the packet suggest (one shouldn’t be surprised) but that may well be due to the fact they are cramped and were potted-on late. However, they are multiple headed and provide a good contrast and point of interest at the bedding level. The fuchsias are in full swing and looking good and the sweet peas are still doing well along the fence but struggling up the wigwams – are they too close together there? The container of nicotianas is absolutely stunning, a real success. My wife and I are so pleased with it. The white and pink roses are in their second bloom already and the lavenders are still going strong. The herbs are looking good; the fennel is setting seed and is over 6 feet high. The rosemary, French tarragon and sage are thriving but the oregano looks like the leaves have been affected by something but now it is in flower so looks better.

I have already had an idea for next year's bedding – cornflowers. They are doing really well on the allotment and if a flower can thrive down there it will be fine in the garden. I also saw a friend’s potted container of mixed cornflowers and that looked really good. They provide good height, a bushy appearance and some good sized flowers that stand out while also giving ground cover. What is more, you simply sow them direct into the ground, no seed trays, potting-on and planting out which for next year is something I’ll be looking for as I hope to be out of my easy non time consuming job and into something more meaningful but alas more like regular hours. I was going to sow poppies in the front garden this year but ran out of time because I need to make a decent bed with a good amount of soil, and make a border edge too and I also meant to repaint the (what was) white wall behind to give a good backdrop. I can do this in the autumn and be ready for next year. I may also put some poppies in the back garden. Look at me, dreaming of next year already and I’m yet to go on my summer holiday.

5th August
At lunchtime I planted out about 27 purple sprouting broccoli at the allotment and scattered many slug pellets around – I will not be around to protect them at all for over 2 weeks after all! Looking at the calabrese, I noticed that about 4 heads were looking ready to harvest but not quite as large as I’d expect. Thinking that they would bolt whilst I’m away I picked them concluding that it was better not to let them be wasted but to have them safely in the bank, well, freezer.

In the evening I did a rush job of planting out all remaining cinerarias and to plant the laurentias in a container and I gathered all the containers together to be watered by my neighbour during the holiday. It is my ‘other’ (non DIY expert) neighbour who will be looking after things as there is a gap in our fence which enables us to water each others’ gardens. I picked one large bunch of sweet peas and gave them to a neighbour a little further down. Yes, it was a young, female neighbour so I was glad when her husband answered the door. He wasn’t at all jealous, just deeply hurt that they were not specifically for him.

6th August
Passing via the allotment on work duty I picked a small bunch of sweet peas for someone at work and 15 courgettes. I gave some of them away but took the majority on holiday for one of my now favourite dishes - zucchini alla carbonara – yummy!

So it is off on holiday to the beautiful Lake District leaving the grass high before we even leave. We stay overnight tonight at a bed and breakfast place to break up the journey for the boys and get to our accommodation tomorrow. On the way back we are staying overnight at some friends in Leeds and visiting some other friends in Nottingham for lunch on the Saturday so it will be a little over 2 weeks away.

22nd August
We arrived home at 6.30 pm to find all container plants in the front garden dead, that is, the petunias in the hanging basket and the 2 pots of sweet peas, all through lack of water. OK I had not explicitly instructed them to be watered but I would have thought they would be included. What would the back garden hold in store? Well the lawn was higher and the pots and hanging baskets had been watered but the sweet peas also looked pretty dour, again due to lack of watering. I’m guessing my neighbours thought they wouldn’t need watering as they were in the border but they were right up against the fence which protects from the rain by a surprising amount. Again – not specifically instructed but . . . Later on I trimmed back all tendrils and deadheaded merely to get rid of all energy and water sapping material to give the plants a better chance. This was of course followed by a decent watering.

How did my Dad do with counting the courgette harvest? He told me he picked ‘about 15, no, let’s say nearer 20’!

24th August
At the allotment I picked 12 courgettes and 10 heads of calabrese. Some of them we had for tea and very nice they were too, the rest I blanched and froze.

In the garden I borrowed a lawn mower from my neighbour (the least he could do considering the sweet pea situation which shows no sign yet of any improvement) and got the lawn under control. I must get a new mower soon though. The mower I used had no grass collection facility so my 5 year old helped me rake up the grass and he was kept busy and happy using his little wheelbarrow to take it all to the compost bin. He was a delight to watch. Apart from that I cut up the rest of the lilac branches I cut down at the end of the garden before the holiday to take the pressure off the back fence.

25th August
The garden sweet peas may be finished but those on the allotment are still going great. I picked a bunch for my wife. What does the allotment look like I hear you ask? Well the paths and edges are overgrown with grass but apart from that and some strong bindweed growth in section 1 around the carrots, each section brims with good vegetable greenery and the weed suppressing membrane seems to be doing its job.

In section 1 the carrots are doing well. I have not had a huge germination rate but those that are up look large enough from what I can see under the fleece. The 5 teasel plants are just bushy leaves, no stem. I’ll have to check if they are an annual or biennial, the latter would explain this. (They are biennial.) The cornflowers at the end of the section are fantastic. Many are still in bloom and the bees are buzzing round them – a definite choice for the garden next year.

In section 2 the older leeks look great, we’ll be getting a good harvest this winter, and the leeks I planted into section 3 to follow the onions are doing fine, but obviously not as large – at least we’ll get something from that section as a double bonus after the great onion harvest. I’ve recently read that you should not bend over the onion leaves as I did as that breaks and bruises the leaves and can be an entry point for mould which would mean less storage time or damaged veg so I’ll have to keep a close eye on the ones back home.

In sections 4 and 5 the sprouts and purple sprouting broccoli have established themselves with some of the sprouts looking quite strong. Two of the first plantings are large plants with sprouts forming well. I just hope that the rest were not planted out too late for a harvest. Still, plenty of time to go yet. In section 6 the 2 surviving cauliflowers are large but with no curd that I can see from outside the netting, the sprouts I put in as extra seem mostly to have succumbed to slugs and the calabrese are now harvested so this section would seem to have finished but with a small amount of hope for any extra benefits that might just come my way.

In section 7, 2 of the yellow courgette plants I bought from the nursery are producing pumpkins! Otherwise, despite some courgette plants being rather large, I have not had the volume of courgettes I was expecting and I put that down to the bad start I had. That said, we have done well and feasted on courgettes a lot, I just haven’t had the lovely glut that enables me to give some away to elderly friends and work colleagues, something I like doing as I want to keep hold of pretty much all other produce as it keeps so well.

In section 8 the sweet peppers have been a disaster. After the holiday I have seen some small red ones which look more like chillies. I think it was a mistake to put them in the open ground where they were so exposed (I was expecting a hotter, dryer summer just as the Met Office predicted – hah!). Elsewhere I have one crown prince squash and a few pumpkins but the cucumbers are not producing anything.

In section 9 not only do I have the colour of some healthy sweet peas but also the grand upright sweet corn which is showing some good large pods and at ground level, most of the butternut squash plants have survived that period where a few looked as though they were dying (one definitely did) and there is definite proof of squashes developing. So if I do well with the brassicas I can say I’ve had a pretty good year, but as I said already, it is still early days.

27th August
I did a bit of weeding in the garden but did not get too far. I think the garden sweet peas are dead. Whilst rummaging around for courgettes I found an enormous cucumber so that’s one for the year at least!

It is not even August bank holiday yet but already I have noticed yellowed leaves scattered on the road at one point of a country lane I drive along each day and cycling into work I have felt that it will soon be time to don a light fleece for the journey. Surely it can’t be autumn just yet can it?

15 - 30th July


15th July
With due sense of expectation and purpose I stepped out of the car. I looked down at the metal object in my hand – a cheap multi use penknife bought from a petrol station. I carefully unfolded the large blade of the main knife and walked over to my intended recipient of a quick but effective slice of the steel. Two short slices later the job was done. I had harvested the first 2 courgettes of the year – a great moment and one that was overdue. A relief and a joy. Then later – looking back at last years’ records, I realised that the first courgette picking last year was the 7th July so I am only 8 days later this time. Mind you, last year they all came together in great abundance whereas this year it is only about 4 plants that seem ready with others still in their infancy. That might mean that the later plants will be cropping later when the earlier ones have stopped so it could work out rather well. Then again . . .

It was also the day to plant out the leeks. I made an evening trip to the plot as this was the only feasible time that I had to get this job done (I’ll probably have to do the same with the sprouts and broccoli too). I filled up section 2 with 66 more leeks so that now that section is full and yet there were still more to go in so I dotted some at the end of section 1 as well, another 13 and still I have more to go in. Perhaps when the onions come out they can go in there. It was definitely dusk if not nightfall when I left but it was great to be out. It reminded me of when I was young and I would be out as late as possible on a summers’ evening playing football or cricket and invariably moaning at my fellow players’ lack of staying power as they sloped off earlier.

17th July
I gained another 2 courgettes from the allotment and a really good sized bunch of sweet peas from the garden. It won’t be until Monday or Tuesday that we can start to clean and move back into our kitchen. I am really grateful that we have been able to get a new one – we certainly needed it given the state of the old one, but it has dragged on a little too long and we haven’t really been able to settle and the house is in a somewhat disorganised state although I’m pleased with how we have been able to manage. This has led to less time being available for gardening. We have had a few dinners out at both sets of parents and that takes up gardening time too, although I am definitely not complaining at other people cooking dinner for us!

Today was the day to push over the onions. The leaves have been going brown and yellow for a while and I am told that bending over the leaves stops any fungal infection getting into the bulb, though I can’t see how a bent leaf would stop that – it’s still attached after all. There is an art to harvesting onions, and that is in stages. First you bend them over, then lift them from the ground but lay them on the soil, and then lay them out to dry which surely has to be done under cover because it takes from 1 – 3 weeks and when do we ever have that length of time guaranteed as having no rain? By drying them properly, they store longer, about 6 months, and any that are affected by rust spots and the like, you eat up rather than store, or they can be frozen. If I can dry them properly, then the 3 biggest will be entered into the allotment show in September. My Dad said that the other day he was chatting to a chap at the allotment and he pointed out the good size of my onions and Dad was proud to be able to say they belonged to his little lad.

20th July
At the allotment I noticed that something unusual is happening to the butternut squashes. Back on Friday I had seen that one on the far left seemed to have simply wilted a little. I thought little of it as we were expecting rain and none of the others were like it. On Saturday we popped in as a family and I noticed that the next squash in line was the same. Then today, the third one had suffered too. I gave them a good drink of water and I will have to return to make some sort of deep cut into the soil to make a gap barrier before the fourth one goes – perhaps there is some organism in the soil.

22nd July
I picked 5 courgettes today – the first decent amount of decent sized vegetables, and in the evening I cooked a recipe I learnt from Jamie Oliver – zucchini alla carbonara – ‘delish’ as Jamie would say!

24th July
After a frustrating afternoon at work stuck in traffic, I managed to get to the allotment armed with a series of baskets to harvest the onions. 54 sturons, 53 settons and 36 centurions, a grand total of 143 mostly decent sized onions with many large ones as well. Some were so large that I just about got them through the hole cut in the membrane. With my wife spending £1 on a kilogram of red onions yesterday I think we are on to a winner. I also picked 2 more courgettes and it was time to dig up the garlic. Despite the fact that from above the ground they did not look like they were up to much in terms of growth, the bulbs were of a similar size to last year and I ended up with 10 of them.

Especially after last years’ total disappointment with onions, it was with a huge sense of joy, that I drove off with the car stinking of onion and garlic. It really is a great satisfaction which has an added sense of achievement considering previous failure. This is what is so good about gardening: you learn from your mistakes and repeat what you did well and work on what went wrong, you research the possibilities and try different ways. Mind you, isn’t that true for pretty much all aspects of life? It’s a good metaphor for life and the type of thing that can be taught practically to children. Perhaps it would even work on managers. I only mention that because I heard this week of a car sales manager giving a start of the day pep talk to his sales team and ending with a motivational one liner: ‘a sale is a transfer of energy’. Apparently when he said this his hearers did their best to not splutter into their coffee. If I had been there I would have had to have asked the question: ‘oh really, how come?’ I mean, it isn’t true in a literal or a metaphorical sense – what does it mean? This is the same manager who gathered the workers together at a new car dealership he was put in charge of and said ‘I hate negative people’. When I heard that I made the obvious remark of ‘that’s pretty negative isn’t it?’ This manager does not strike me as a gardener!

25th July
After 3 Saturdays of fiddling around with the kitchen we at last had a family day out which was really good. After coming home and before dinner I pottered around in the garden tidying up after the mess that was left by certain people who helped with the kitchen project. The grass of course still needs a good cut as it is looking like a wild area now, but it must be rather wet as we have had damp conditions for at least 3 weeks. This does not help the courgettes to grow either as although they need plenty of food and water, they really benefit from decent sunshine. How ironic that just after a bumper onion crop I am faced with lean picking on a crop that has been super bumper for the previous 2 years!

29th July
I had planned on going to the allotment after work and planting the sprouts but time ran out for me and I only had opportunity to merely drop off the plants at the plot. Dad was there picking blackberries and so I cut a batch of sweet peas for him to take back to Mum who was rather pleased!

30th July
At lunchtime I went to plant the sprouts. At first the weather was a little drizzly and so I put on my coat and stood picking off all caterpillars and eggs (again) from the plants. When I was ready to actually plant them I took off my coat as it was warming up, dry and I didn’t fancy crawling around under the netting in my coat. Once inside the netting the sun was shining down on me and I was rather hot. After planting, and as I was just watering in the plants, the heavens opened and I raced to put on my coat again. I got soaked from the thigh down. Nevertheless I managed to plant out 16 sprouts as refills for the ones that have been eaten. Two of the existing and surviving ones are no larger than the ones I planted, but the other 2 are growing really well. I also picked 3 more courgettes and when I got home I washed and sliced them and cooked them in olive oil and butter with black pepper and crushed garlic and had them as a warm side dish to my sandwiches. They went from the plant to my plate in 45 minutes and they tasted great.

10 - 13th July


I went to the allotment again to do a feeding programme on the peppers and squashes – it takes awhile. I was also able to pick some sweet peas. We have enough at home to supply our cut flower needs so what to do with these ones? I had decided on giving a small posy from each cut to one of the receptionists at work and I had a particular one in mind who was not too far down the time line when I could give them to her (I was worried that they would wilt). The problem arose in my mind however – ‘How do I, a married man, give flowers to another woman without her getting the wrong idea and making mental attachments to me, or think that I’m a creep, and without being so obviously the other direction and declare loud and clear that I have no interest whatsoever in the poor lady and don’t be so ridiculous as to think that anyone would be so inclined as to present you with a small gift?’

I approached the lady in question, raised the small bunch and asked ‘would you like these with no strings attached?’ She smiled and said ‘yes please’. Success! I don’t always get it right with the fairer sex you know!  Like most men I get a bit confused as to why women seem to smile and giggle at the inappropriate advances and comments of handsome men, but when a less aesthetically pleasing man does something nice for a woman, he is regarded as a creep!

Yesterday I cut a bunch of sweet peas of various colours for my Mum. She and Dad have been hosting us for a few meals while the kitchen is in chaos and this was a little thank you. Today I cut a bunch of the red and white sweet peas for ourselves and they have a certain stunning quality when combined in a vase.



11th July
As some light rain drizzled down I was found out in the garden checking over the sprouts plants and rubbing off the many caterpillars and eggs to be found on them. I fed the garden plants before dinner.

Everything seems broken at the moment – my glasses, the car (a starter motor fitted just long enough ago to be out of warranty but has only done about 9 – 10 thousand miles!), the old kitchen, the toilet seat, the back fence and the lawnmower!

13th July
I potted up the sprouting broccoli into old plastic cups and then proceeded to go about removing caterpillars and eggs from them. I will have to recheck the brassicas in a little while before they get planted out. That is a job which is overdue but no good in this damp weather as it involves digging into wet clay soil. Dad’s brassicas are large and productive and mine are at the starting gate.

Another bunch of sweet peas from the garden, a nice mixed display. This is now the third decent sized bunch, probably 4 if you add together the 2 early but small offerings and the ones at the allotment. You can’t buy them in the shop as they wouldn’t last long enough to reach the shelves but I guess you would pay at least £2 for a handful, more if you were not buying in a supermarket. I also picked a few more strawberries. Again, they are deep red, juicy and sweet, no need for sugar or even cream!

7 - 8th July


By now I am usually picking courgettes which have passed the early fruiting stage and have settled down into a regular production supply. At lunchtime though I was planting out the last of the courgettes, a few pumpkins and one more butternut squash. I noticed that of the courgettes already planted, all are establishing and 2 or 3 are beginning to thrive and go for it. The squashes have settled in now and are beginning to sprawl and the sweet corn are thick and sturdy and reaching for the sky. I am still impressed and amazed by both the onions and by the weeds that have shot up in the gap between the membranes in section 6. The cornflowers look like they will be in bloom soon but the teasels, despite a lush and large leaf spread, have not begun their upward growth unlike the ones I see by the road side on a motorway roundabout I pass twice a day. The carrots are pushing up on their protective fleece which I must fit properly before it becomes pointless being there if it isn’t protecting. The garlic still look thin and pale so I’m not setting my hopes on a bumper crop from them – I still have most of last year’s hanging up in the conservatory. Perhaps in our new kitchen they will be used up. I came away from the allotment with a courgette plant which had no space to go into, but I will keep hold of it as the 2 pumpkins look so weak I think I’ll lose one and then the courgette can go into its space.

8th July
I returned to the allotment to find that yes, I had lost one of the pumpkins, and the other 2 as well, so in went the courgette and the 2 extra cucumbers that I had bought. The sweet peppers are not looking too good. They are stunted, pale and scrawny. I didn’t get round to making little holes filled with manure for them as a concentrated plot of fertile soil for each of them, maybe that has something to do with it, or the fact that they became a bit pot bound, or that they have been exposed to the weather unlike last year when they were in containers in my garden. Mind you, we have had some still and scorching weather, akin to their native land.

Tuesday, 2 July 2019

2nd July


2nd July
The heatwave continues. I cut a bumper crop of sweet peas today. All varieties along the fence are now out and thriving as are the cupanis in the front garden tub, but the ones growing up bamboo wigwams are thin and unproductive as yet. The 3 hanging baskets with the purple surfinas are a glorious ball of colour, they are fabulous – definitely one to repeat for next year – not that I’m thinking that far ahead yet – I’m still waiting for my first courgette! The bedding plants are establishing well with red buds of flower on some of the salvias. The fuchsias and the phlox are all out as too are the lavender bushes I planted out last summer, with the ones I planted out this year looking healthy. The red carnations just keep coming, and as for strawberries, well, despite a recent slowing down in production, we have had 2 punnets worth of sweet, juicy fruit – delicious. We have also had about 2 bags worth of salad so far.



It doesn’t look like I’ve done much in the garden recently judging by this journal. I’ve been watering, deadheading and the like, but thanks to work and some presentations I’m doing in another arena of life I’ve been pushed for time. That and of course the small matter of a new kitchen. The old one has been falling apart for a few years and the lino on the floor has been damaged for a while and the floor underneath has been affected by damp. Last Saturday we emptied the kitchen, then set to work with taking up the hardwood flooring (mostly rotten). Then cleaning down of the walls, ripping off the tiles, and organising my good neighbour, the retired carpenter, to lay new plywood over the wooden floor boards, and latex self levelling cement over the concrete parts. Why 2 different types of floor you ask? Well the back end of the kitchen used to be an old bathroom, and the side had a concrete hearth for a chimney stack. The same neighbour then plastered some great hole in the wall. Then it was my turn to fill holes, my wife's turn to take off a freeze from the top of the wall, and tomorrow the electrician comes to put in some extra sockets and a new electrical point for the cooker. In the afternoon the boxed up kitchen units arrive and then over the weekend and Monday we are painting the walls. On Tuesday the fitter comes to make all the raw materials into a kitchen. Next Friday we have the delivery of a new cooker, fridge freezer and dishwasher and then our handy neighbour can put new floor tiles down and all we have to do is then move everything back in that we moved out last Saturday. Oh, and there was the taking of all the old stuff to the recycling centre not to mention all the research and preparation we have done to facilitate all this. So I reckon I can be forgiven for being not too busy in the garden and not noting down what I have done, especially as this week alone I have had 3 rather late nights in the kitchen in a heat filled environment.
One kitchen nearly gutted

Ready for the build

Finished!


Next post: 7th July

Monday, 24 June 2019

24th and 30th June


24th June
Today the leeks began to be planted out into section 2. I went to the allotment at lunchtime and planted out 34. Keen observers will note that is the same number as last year. Quite so! Time is of the essence nowadays since my work pattern changed and I can only spend lunchtimes at the allotment, and I did not have time to increase the number of slots cut into the membrane, so last years’ holes are full and I will return to make more and plant them later. I gave them a good drenching, a good dose of slug pellets and went home for lunch.



30th June
I took my remaining curcubits to the allotment to fill in the gaps/replace eaten plants and planted out all but one green courgette plant, 3 pumpkins and a butternut squash. I spent about as much time watering as I did planting. We have certainly had a good old fashioned ‘flaming June’ and today was an absolute scorcher. I still need to plant out the 2 extra cucumbers and it wasn’t until all spaces were full that I remembered them!

Next post: 2nd July

Tuesday, 18 June 2019

16th - 18th June


16th June
At lunchtime I potted on some sprouts plants into plastic cups as I will definitely be needing replacements at the allotment. I must grow them big and strong before I put them out. I planted out the last few ageratums in the evening and potted up some cinerarias for the window box in the playhouse. I gave the garden a really good drenching tonight. Today has been a really hot day and I fear for the smaller plants that have not yet established as well as all the container ones.

Great news! The first sweet pea has flowered. Both the white and the magenta one which has one dark petal and one light petal – very pretty, and very pleasing. There are more of both varieties budding up but not yet from the blue and reds (the ones I sowed myself).



17th June
Do I have some capacity for tempting the weather, particularly the rain? A lady at work now warns me not to have a barbeque when she wants to be outside of a weekend and today I was just mowing the lawn when the rain started – after the great watering I gave the garden last night! Mind you, although I had just started mowing I had also just stopped, or rather the mower had just stopped after making an unhealthy sound, and a fight for life followed by a steady stream of cloudy smoke which continued long after turning off. For an electric mower, I don’t think this is good news.

Before all the rain (and we had a good downpour followed by extended lighter rain – just what we needed) I had been to the allotment to cover the carrots with fleece, trim some of the long grass round the edges, refill the slug traps (yes they had worked) and sprinkle more pellets about the place. I had also gone to Hilliers this morning and bought 5 courgette plants – 2 green and 3 yellows all for £2.98.


Thursday 18th June
At lunchtime I forked over section 2 which went very well as the soil is light and untrodden, and covered it in membrane. This is the section for the leeks but then later I read in a magazine of one gardener talking about their produce and saying their leeks were hit by slugs. Last year I assumed the rabbits ate my leeks (they do!) and thought that, like onions, slugs are not interested in leeks. What with the under the membrane slug problem in other sections, should I fear a slug attack on the leeks?

Next post: 24th June

15th June


15th June
The weather has improved dramatically over the weekend and into today. It’s been very hot indeed. So I needed to go to the allotment and get on with some watering. Looking around I saw that the sweet corn, the brassicas that have not been eaten and the onions are doing well, the onions fantastically so. It seems that just recently the onions have bulked up and their leaves have got even bigger. There are a few that are still small and scrawny but most are doing well with some looking like they will grow into real beauties. On the other hand, the squashes look rather weak and feeble. They are trying to resist slug attacks which never help and I am thinking that perhaps I did not sow early enough to allow them to grow large enough to be planted out at the normal time and be big enough and tough enough to handle the slugs which they usually do. The peppers are also lacking in vigour and again I fear that is because I kept them in smaller pots for too long and stunted them. The sweet peas are still waiting to grab a hold on life, they look thin and pale although one or two seem to be producing a new stem that looks like bolting skywards. The carrots are still there, little sprigs of leaves in rows that have plenty of gaps, such is their temperamental mentality. The garlic looks OK but not as good as they did last year. The leek bed is producing a mass of lovely bind weed and other weeds that I aim to fork out soon then lay the membrane and plant out the leeks from back home where many are ready to go into their final growing places.



Whilst at the allotment I saw Jim from the committee. He was giving out information about a show on the 20th September for allotment holders. There are 29 show categories with prizes for 1st, 2nd and 3rd places as well as commendations. These give you points and the plot holder with the most number of points overall is the grand champion. The cost is 50p per entry per class and it looks like a bit of fun. I intend to enter.

Back at home it is safe to say we are well and truly in strawberry season which, due to our variety being one that crops from May to September, is going to be a long one. Most fruit grow quite large and we picked a couple the middle of last week but that was only the first flush. We have now picked the equivalent of a supermarket punnet. I usually love them with sugar and cream, so much so that my taste buds almost demand the sweetness added on so I’m very glad to say that our strawberries taste really good and sweet just as they are. Other great news from home is that one white and one magenta sweet pea is ready to bloom any day now. The hanging baskets are now in good bloom mainly due to the surfinas in the back garden which look like petunias but without their flowers being as sticky – thankfully. The basket in the front has a mass of red and white petunia blooms which surprised me a little as according to the label they were both red! The white bush rose in the back garden is the best it has ever been having over 50 blooms out all at once – so many the branches are flopping over.

10th - 13th June


10th June
I managed to get to the allotment to plant out the remaining squashes to find that slugs have had their wicked way with a number of the ones already planted. They’ve completely eaten 2 yellow courgettes, most a green one and a whole cucumber plant. Thankfully they either don’t like butternut squash or were too full after eating the other stuff, or perhaps the butternuts are big enough to look after themselves. I planted out what I had and gave a good sprinkling of pellets. I’m wondering if the weed suppressing membrane is helping the slugs. They live in the soil and so will come to the surface of an evening, meet the membrane and travel round underneath it in the absence of vegetation until they find a nice opening and fresh air and lo and behold, there’s a young juicy plant to eat! At least 8 sprout plants have also met the same fate as too have some cauliflowers. The calabrese however are progressing well. At home I asked my wife to get me some cheap beer from the supermarket when she goes tomorrow. Just in case you don’t know, beer traps are rather successful in catching slugs – I’d hate you to think I was desperate for cheap beer – or even expensive beer, despite how slugs might drive you to it.



12th June
In what may seem like a truly wino-like moment, I found myself on the allotment at 9am cracking open cans of Asda lager. I can honestly say though, it wasn’t for me. I dug 5 holes for plastic cups and filled them with the lager. I have sited them on the edge of a few sections underneath the membrane so that they can entice slugs to their deaths. Cue: maniacal laughter.


13th June
After a day out with the family I planted out the cineraria and the ageratums into the borders.

5th -8th June


5th June
I bought 2 rolls of 8m x 1.5m weed suppressing membrane and after work I pinned out one along section 8 and planted my 16 sweet peppers, staked them and tied them in followed by the customary watering. I then laid out more membrane in section 6 in the small brassica section and planted out 10 cauliflowers. There are more to go out but I’ll need a little more membrane first.  Then more watering and the sprinkling of slug pellets.

The Kitchen Garden at Kew Gardens

At home I planted out my last lavender that was still in a small pot. The fathead variety went into the rockery. I potted up the nicotianas, 7 into a large container and 3 into hanging baskets, then I finished planting up the pots for the play house window box with a mixture of laurentias and cinerarias.

It has been much cooler today and my rise in energy is a result. The weather forecasters have been warning of rain at the midweek point, but nothing yet.


6th June
A lazy day at home where I planted out about 40 salvias and in doing so found 2 slugs in the tray. They must have found their way in when I had the tray out in the border to get some sunshine a few weeks ago, and the slugs, spoilt for choice merrily munched on them back in the greenhouse. I also found space for a few rocket plants in the borders. All the rocket has been allowed to grow lanky in the back of the greenhouse so it does not look appetising or bulky enough to ease an appetite. It just flops over and lies in the sun. I trust in a recovery. What are looking strong are the sweet peas as they rocket skywards – most heartening.

I took the 5 year old to the allotment with a long list of plans, but left it too late in the afternoon. We laid down membrane on section 7 and I cut crosses for courgettes. Two yellow ones went in, with space for one more that has only recently germinated at home, and 3 green ones, one of which I managed to slice out of the pot with the metal end of the tape measure I had used to mark out the right distances so that one went back into the pot with hopes and prayers. We laid more membrane in section 9 and planted out 6 butternut squash with space for more, again, coming on at home. I planted a cucumber plant at each end of sections 7 and 8 and put in a stake for each. The 5 year old did some watering for me but that was all we had time for what with various needs of aforementioned young chap and thus had no time left for planting out the pumpkins, the crown prince squashes or the remaining cauliflowers, or for weeding the leek section and laying out membrane on it, or for preparing some more carrot furrows and sowing carrots or for lining the compost bin with some plastic sheeting I have there. It’s just as well I didn’t take the shears to cut the grass as that would have been another activity I wouldn’t have done. Never mind, it was an amount of work done that was equivalent to a stop off after work so it is all beneficial.

 7th June
I was woken in the early hours by thunder and the sound of heavy rain and I was slightly concerned about the newly planted courgettes, cucumbers and squashes but grateful for the removal of serious watering tasks and for the fact that it was just as well I hadn’t sown more carrot seeds yesterday. I rolled over and slept well once more knowing my water butt was probably full again already.

Monday 8th June

Not a great deal of work done, just a resowing of another pot of basil and a shallow tub of rocket, planting out a few laurentias into spaces in the hanging baskets and potting up 7 decent sized basil seedlings into their larger summer pots.

4th June


4th June
Again I went to the allotment at lunchtime and after work. At lunch, I erected a wigwam for each trio of sweet peas and strung some twine around and tied them in, and I put in some poles along the line of sweet peas by the compost bin and did the same with string there too. It was a worthwhile stop-off as this job took half an hour and would have seriously detracted from other work at the end of the day. After work I laid some weed suppressing membrane at one end of section 9 and planted out my 10 sweet corn plants and watered them in. I raked the manure around the areas that needed it and watered the carrots and cornflowers. It is a joy and a relief to see the carrots coming up after last year when I had 3 which were all eaten before reaching a point anywhere near maturity. It just goes to show that you have to have the right soil for carrots, and also how good a rabbit defence mechanism is, not just for carrots, but the onions which are all doing fantastically. The leaves are big and bold and fat and juicy, I just hope the bulbs are in a similar condition come harvest. Then there are the leeks that will be planted out too. All these would be devastated by rabbits were it not for a £20 wire mesh fence – what a false economy it was last year not to have one.
 
The Kitchen Garden at Kew Gardens
In the evening I had to clear a load of junk away from in front of the back gate. There was an old BBQ cover that is all mucky, a slimy and dirty plastic washing up bowl and a nearly rusted away tin bin. I also had to cut back the lilac tree where it impinged access to the gate, and scrape away a mound of soil that has accumulated over years from various organic material, mainly that which has blown down from the trees and rotted down into an incredibly fine, sandy soil once one sieves out the stones and clears it of roots, which I did, and stored to be used for further carrot sowings at the allotment as it is tremendously fine and I hope very well stocked with nutrients. All this was for the fact that workmen need to get into our back garden tomorrow.

More run of the mill gardening tasks were potting up rocket into large containers and planting out 4 salvias into open ground – heavily protected by slug pellets and porridge (the slugs have to eat their way through that to get to the plants and hopefully are too stuffed to eat any plant when they get there!) – and 4 into pots made from the bottom section of 4 pint milk containers. These containers have been cut so that they can sit in the window box of the play house. Four of them will fit in but as the box is in the shade, I am making 8 and then rotating them so they spend time in daylight.

1st - 3rd June


1st June
It has been an absolutely stinking hot day. Yesterday was the hottest day of the year so far and today has topped that. When I checked on the allotment I found that the tray of cauliflowers had wilted rather significantly so I dug a trench and planted them all out in the middle of the section and drowned them in water and hoped for the best. I attempted to put up the netting over the larger brassica enclosure and managed one length with the springy netting which I had measured earlier and found that I could cover the entire patch with 2 lengthwise strips. However, by the time I had pegged it out it was too far stretched in one direction to meet in the middle with any more lengths from the other side. I left it at that – time that was wasted as far as I could see as I would need 3 lengths, more stitching or sewing and I might not have enough netting for that amount. On my travels I had to buy another large bag of compost (£4.99).

Back home I tied in all the sweet peas along the fence, at the wigwams and in the containers which now have wigwams of their own with twine wrapped round to climb up.


2nd June
I’d had time to think about the brassica netting overnight and decided that I would attempt to use the scaffolding netting that made the walls as a roof as well. It rolls up at the edge very well to peg together without leaving gaps for animals to get in through. After watering the cauliflowers  again (they seem to be responding well) I got on with the task of the netting roof and managed one strip at one end. It went up pretty well and I’m very optimistic about this scheme. I planted out my spare sweet peas – 2 wigwams in section 1 by the garlic and a row in section 9 where there is a wider portion by the compost bin.


3rd June
I am determined to crack on with the tasks at the allotment before it gets too late to be planting out so it was a lunchtime trip to finish the netting – 2 more strips and it looks great – all finished. After work there followed another trip to plant out 20 fillbasket sprouts plants into section 4 with freshly laid weed suppressing membrane down as well. It’s the watering that adds on so much time down there. I didn’t want to stop before I’d finished planting all the sprouts, and then of course, each one needs watering too. Anyway, I am very pleased with a good couple of tasks completed.

At home I potted up the fifth hanging basket with 2 salvias for bright colour, a chilli pepper for foliage plus I needed somewhere to plant it, and some laurentias. Unfortunately, the sweet peppers looked like the cauliflowers did after the weekend, all dry and limp so they had a good drenching, as did the rest of the garden. Temperatures continue to be high and I would feel we were entering decent summer weather were it not for the fact that this warm spell is forecast to break up by the end of the week – typical!

As far as progress goes in the garden, there are some flowers on the surfinas in the baskets, the roses are out, the white rose bush is a wonderful flurry of blooms and the carnations in the rockery are the best they have been. There are many carnations out in bloom and more buds ready to come on a little later. The salvias in the tray show evidence of slug attack though.

26th - 29th May


26th May
I took the cauliflowers and calabrese to the allotment to plant out after work. I also took a roll of weed suppressing membrane which had been opened but I thought only for a small strip to line a container (something I forgot with all following container fillings!). I couldn’t understand then, why it covered less than half a section, then looking around I remembered that I had already used most of it for the onion section. So it was only the calabrese that I planted, 20 of them. After digging out some newly rampaging bindweed I cut the holes 8 inches apart in rows 12 inches apart so that now I have a neat little section all watered in and protected. I left the cauliflower tray there as it is protected and gave it a good watering too. I don’t really want to keep moving trays of plants about in the car if I can help it. I’ll return with more membrane later on.



27th May
I had thought that a hot dry summer was on the way after the weekend, but today it was raining most of the day, so no allotmenteering or any progress with the jobs at home which at present run to a fine little list: sow more sunflowers; sow sprouting broccoli and more basil; sharpen shears and axe; plant out sweet peas at the allotment; pot up rocket, leeks, sprouts, laurentia, lemon balm; plant out cauliflowers and sweet corn, spread the manure and collect some more; sort out the netting for the larger brassica enclosure and the strawberries. After that lot is done it will be time to get more membrane out and plant out the squashes and peppers!


29th May
While I was at work, my family were on a jolly to the beach, but they joined me back home to relax in the garden in the sunshine whilst I sowed my last seeds for this year for the vegetable patch – 20 seeds each of the purple sprouting broccoli varieties rudolph and claret. I also sowed about 10 more sunflower seeds. I finally got round to potting up the lemon balm seedlings which are proper miniature plants now, and the laurentias into yoghurt pots. The laurentias have holly-like leaves but they are soft and not prickly, and unlike nicotianas which I had thought they were similar to judging by the pictures on the packets.

25th May


25th May
We were out all of Saturday and had guests yesterday so thanks to it being bank holiday today it was a welcomed day at home and, against British tradition, we had a scorching day for it. It was so hot that I pottered gently in the garden for a while then went and sat in the shade to cool off, so work was slow but I accomplished what I set out to do. First of all, I planted out the 5 year old’s sunflowers. I broke one off at the base but still planted it – you never know (well actually, I do know – the slugs will get it before I ever see any sprouting) and one had its stem snapped, but 3 made it to the border, were protected with a sawn of milk carton, watered heavily and laced with coffee grounds inside the container to deter slugs. I set up 3 wigwams each of 3 bamboo canes and planted out 6 sweet pea plants to each wigwam and tied up supporting string. The varieties were all mixed up – including one variety (supreme mix which is a mixture anyway) as I want these wigwams to be a mass of different colours, not like the fence panels which I want to be sections of one colour each. As the plants grow up these supports I will put horizontal canes across from the tops of the wigwams so that the plants can grow across as well – just to add to the colour effect. I had 6 cupani and 5 swan lake plants left over so I planted them up into a container for each colour and I will place them out in the front garden – after I’ve done some weeding there! The leftover plants will go to the allotment. Having planted all the sweet peas I was going to, I then went round tying in the ones that needed to be, as well as snipping off the lesser shoots so that they concentrate energy in sending a good strong stem skywards – to where we’ll see the blooms.


Someone we know has given us a self-supporting hammock and we erected that for the first time yesterday. Due to the heat today, I spent some time out on it, in the shade of course. From that restful position and the new angle at which you look at the garden I was able to appreciate the swifts swooping across the sky pretty much all the day. I also saw a blue tit fly in and out of a small hole at the end of our fascia board at the eve of the back of the house. I could actually hear chirping from inside the loft when the bird was out – definitely a nest there, it’s quite exciting and obviously my loft is a more desirable a location to raise a family than the purpose built nesting box I put up the autumn before last which I saw being inspected but not inhabited. The place was also buzzing with bees and a fair few different species of bees as well which is encouraging given the bee crisis we are facing. Apart from that, a tortoise shell butterfly kept visiting a plant throughout the day, much to the relief of our 5 year old who has been watching cocoons at school and seen butterflies emerge and be released – to his hysterical distress (he thought they had left him for ever) – but now he believes that one of the freed butterflies has sought him out and come to live near us so that he can see him again. I chose not to burst the illusion. As long as the butterflies stay off my developing brassicas, I’m happy too.

In the cool of the evening, it was time to give the garden a good drenching with water, especially to the newly planted items. Job done.

20th - 22nd May


20th May
Today I enclosed section 6 with the netting. The reason I did not go for all 3 sections at once was to allow for some degree of accessibility but mainly for 2 years time when the rotation system means that I’ll have brassicas back in sections 7, 8 and 9 and there will be a much larger gap between sections 8 and 9 (and a high one too with the apple tree there). Forward planning hey? I also popped into Hilliers to buy 16 metres of small meshed netting to go over the top of the brassica enclosures – the builders stuff would be too heavy. That set me back £11.20 plus I got a red wired hanging basket for our one and only tomato plant for £2.49.



Later in the evening I potted up 3 basil plants each for two ladies at work and for us. I also potted up the basket with the aforementioned tomato and hung it up over the strawberry bed. This coincided very nicely with it suddenly being significantly warmer yesterday and today and thus appropriate for the plant to come outside. I am itching to get the brassicas in the ground to make a bit of space in the greenhouse as I need to pot on a few lemon balm seedlings and the laurentias. I also need to get the sweet peas out too. I have been waiting for the spring bulbs to die back which they have done to a fair degree. I gave the border a good clear up of weeds and assorted debris and I will attempt to plant out the sweet peas over the weekend. I will take some to the allotment as well as they are good bee attractors. As far as plants on the allotment are concerned I have seen neither hide nor hair of the poppies I sowed. I still have some cornflowers to sow which I’d better get a move on with, not to mention sunflowers both there and at home.



21st May
I made an extra trip to the allotment at lunchtime to sow the carrot seeds. In section 1 I sowed 2 rows of chantenay and 2 rows of autumn king and 1 row of tendersnax as that was all the seed I had left over. Apart from the 4 x 3 seeds each for the family in our tubes at home, that is 250 tendersnax seeds used up. How? Last year I actually sowed seeds 2-3 inches apart so as not to disrupt the soil when thinning which can attract carrot root fly – and also to save money. As well as being very stingy, it doesn’t help when you have a low germination rate. This year it is no expense spared as the seed was sown thickly, will be thinned and covered with horticultural fleece for all of £1 from the Pound shop. Back home there are the sure signs of germinated carrots in our tubes, as well as the first carnation flowers out.

On my second trip to the allotment I tried to sort out how I was going to secure the light netting over the top of the brassica enclosure. My idea of stitching the 2 materials together is more than possible however it is rather fiddly and incredibly time consuming. After a length completed which was about as long as my arm, I gave up in a bad tempered frustration and came home, cheered by my adoring family and the latest addition of Gardeners’ World Magazine having arrived in the post today.

22nd May
Pegs are the answer! Armed with 4 packets of clothes pegs bought for a total of £2 from the supermarket, I managed to close off the top of the brassica enclosure. I also sowed 3 rows of cornflower seeds in section 1.