the view from here


A nice sunny afternoon, potting on and admiring the views!

Time to have another getting at the tomatoes right - I don't think i have the attention or finesse required for them - much happier planting out the summer cabbage and lettuce!

you shower

So the eagle- eyed action Men and awake readers will have noticed a glaring mistake - the plot plan had four beds on the left hand side, when in fact there's five! Realising you've an extra bed for the season was like pulling over to pick up a hitch-hiker and finding out its Cat Power, asking you if you know the way to San Josè! So the peas have re-entered this years plan... planted in succession on 11 April, and 2 May.
The planting two weeks ago (on the 11 April) is proving fruitful - check out the progress so far: Musselburgh leeks, Red Rookie cabbage, wheeler imperial cabbage, Nero Kale, Borecole Kale, Celeriac and Sprouting Broccoli - all catching up on the Primo summer cabbages and Olympia Calabrase... the first batch of lettuces is out...the fruit trees buding and blossoming and the spuds are up!!


We're going on a spud hunt


Been a busy week, reaping what was sown a while back which has kept me from the allotment. Not that that freshly prepped tattie bed is still vacant as maggie sandy and patrick stepped up to the plate and got the Maris Bards in on thursday on a spud planting expedition as documented by Sandy. You can imagine the level of instructions I gave!
Whilst there, Maggie and the boys were approached by the previous plotholder who still walks her dog on the golf course everyday. When I first moved in to plot no. 45 Pat had left me a note in the shed wishing me good luck, her and her late husband has had many having years tending and cropping but it was too much for just her now. I never met her in my two years since we moved up the site, but apparently she keeps an eye out for it each day, and particularly likes the stoop!

And I was quite touched as whilst you all avidly read the latest online, Pat comes past once a day, and is quietly happy to see it still productive and tended. And as the seasonal cycle starts again, the fruit buds starting to swell in spring sunshine, and the seeds soaked start to slowly germinate through the shorter nights... its not my allotment. I'm just looking after it for the now.



Shovel our Shit day

Got stuck in early on Sunday, and managed to get the Fen Early onions in,

prepped the bed for the first earlies (Maris Bard) only to get a phone call at 9.21am calling me away to get to Crammond whilst the tide was out for a walk with the boys and good pals Colin and Sharon. Apparently the lifeboat at South Queensferry is the busiest in Scotland (as opposed to those slackers at North Berwick!) due to people getting stuck on the island - the RNLI are having a SOS themed fundraiser next year - Jan 28 2011 and are asking people to come up with their own event - Sow our Spuds day? (too early!), Sharpens our spade day (difficult to pan that out too full day?!) Shovel our Shit day (methinks thats the money bus!) - diaries out please!!

the power plant


Ah the good old days when i worked freelance and had mondays off! Got home from Skye late last night, and so spent the day dottering before getting down at 4pm. Just enough time to get the salads going - mizuna, red salad bowl, webbs wonderful, all year round, cos and romaine.

Cabbage and broccoli already peeking out - and got the Meteor Broad beans into the ground next to the ones planting last autumn - the race is on...

Be good to find out if planting early means slower growing leading to less strong plants - and therefore plant late, the seeds will catch up but be stronger - my hunch is yes. Any thoughts anyone?

Once a year you need to get the fire going - heres a pic from Feb!


hardnex

A beautiful spring day today - four hours spent fixing the greenhouse, installing two new panes, general tidy - taking out the last of the leeks which are slightly mushy and past their best signalling the should really come out last month - shouldn't really effect the soup I got in the hot pot right now!!

Plenty of jerusalem artichokes to re-establish that crop.

Cleared the sprouting broccoli and mixed in the manure to the first bed.
And planted the Lautrec garlic, and shallots, and Raab Broccoli outside,
and two rows of Olympia Broccoli, and Primo summer cabbage in the greenhouse.

Be good to see how the garlic compares to that planted in autumn:

Spent the morning listening to Joanna Newsom's new album as I banged, cut and brushed but it was David Holmes' latest on shuffle which prompted me to stop, sit back and listen later on

You reap what you sow

You've seen the order now peruse the plan!

Recently spent a sunday dismantling the fruit cage, and strapping up the loganberries - seems like there's lots more space already!

Looking west to Nagano...
Looking east to Vancouver...

This years roll call




So here's what consitutes this years hunches.

I'm not bothering with the main crop spuds given the poor
return in the last two years, compared to the ground used...
Otherwise most of the seeds
from last year will cary through...

Cabbage Red Rookie Seeds - Quantity: 65 Seeds
£1.95

Nemaslug Slug Killer (40m² Pack) - Quantity: 40m² Nemaslug Pack
£8.95

Beetroot Cylindra Seeds - Quantity: Sufficient Seed For A 40ft / 12m Row
£1.35

Climbing French Bean Cobra Seeds - Quantity: Sufficient Seed For A 25ft / 7.5m Row
£2.45

Broad Bean Meteor Vroma Seeds - Quantity: Sufficient Seed For A 25ft / 7.5m Row
£1.85

Lady Balfour Seed Potatoes (Second Early) - Quantity: 2Kg Pack (25-30 Tubers)
£6.50

Maris Bard Seed Potatoes (First Early) - Quantity: 2Kg Pack (25-30 Tubers)
£5.75

Lautrec Wight Garlic - Quantity: 2 Bulbs (min. 15 cloves, typically 20-25)
£4.75

Shallot Bulbs: Picasso - Quantity: 25 Bulbs
£4.95

Onion Sets: Fen Early (Heat Prepared) - Quantity: Approx. 100 Fen Early Onion Sets
£3.45


Purple sprouting Broccoli attack!

Happy new year everyone!

Reading scare stories regarding the food scarcities wrought by the cold weather, so decided to wander down to the allotment to check how number 45 was doing, saying as i was at home trying to write an essay - a lo and behold, got down there to disturb two fat pigeons coo-ing as they got stuck into the purple sprouting broccoli. They've pretty much decimated them but we'll see if any buds get through...

Leeks still standing!

Also the Calvo Nero Kale looked weedy but it seems the more you pick the more it grows!







Blue Monday

Blue potatoes straight from the ground? - you'll be telling me the one o'clock gun doesn't shoot a cannonball next!?

So the blight got them in late august but i read that cut the shaws down before the spores can travel down to the tubers, leave for two - three weeks in the ground before lifting them. The slugs might have go them, but surely they had their full munching all my cabbage! Not bad a haul, but relatively small, and not a great yield from each seed potato - six on each roughly. Althugh ths year i used plenty of manure, next year need to feed regularly (with potash?)

  • Still a beautiful autumn afternoon, leaving them to dry.
  • The raspberries keep coming.
  • Final crop of lettuce, by now rather woody and overgrown
  • The challenge - Celeriac looking good!

Its a long way to Belmullet

So being away for the first two weeks of August marked the slugs perfect opportunity - as they swung in in their masses. Cabbages decimated but still retrievable...


Tomatoes bulking up well but not much sun to ripen them...

Lettuce's still producing with Romaine providing welcome juicyness to salad bowls bulk...

Spud hit by blight in mid August but should be retrievable having cut away the leaves... You're to wait 20 days before removing - which should be just in time for 13 Sept show. Mother in law had good advice re presenting vegetables at show - always on a doillie, and upside down (she says!)
Best use of produce though has to be the chutney made with my brother's plum glut in Belfast, my marrows from Edinburgh and apples from Maggie's mum's garden in peebles...International effort

Cabbage update

An update on the cabbages - the summer primos's looking like this - picking has begun, whilst the Savoys have just gone in. I've now picked the last of the beans and peas, and finally got the sprouting broccoli who were looking really thin and almost beyond it...
the leeks look good though!!

The only way is up!



Not sure what this means for the garlic - maybe it's pointing to our latest subscriber, in the southern hemisphere where the growing season don't start til october!!

Greetingz


Greetingz friends around the world!

Another monday night - another evening with the radio tidying and doing the jobs undo from the weekend. There was a great couple of documentaries on - one about the Iraqi national football team,, who recently failed to get through to the World Cup, and then one about women in Cheyna...

Meanwhile - pulled a row of onions to make way for the leeks. The seedling were all planted at the same time but in an experiment I potted on with two different methods - in a deep pot (as I had the hunch that its the roots which get restricted and stunt growth) and in loo roll holders. My hunch proved right as the deep leeks were ready i.e pencil thick, whilst the loo rolls were drowned in their six inch hole!

Also planted out another batch of lettuce (number three?) - Romano's and lollo rosso...

Harvesting - I took in the last of the first of three rows of the broad beans so that i could make space for a final sowing of beetroot, and took the first Primo cabbage home for the freshest of coleslaw... Got the first three 5-inch courgettes, and lots of blackcurrents still coming


I hung the shallots to dry in the shed, and having got some red onions (for the coleslaw!) bent back the rest of the onions so that they can ripen. In a fortnights time will fork the roots and dry for the two weeks whilst we are in Ireland.

To do - pull the peas and get the spouting broccoli in, and pull the rest of the beans and get some Autumn King carrots in...

maggie snatcher




Back still knackered so Maggie's moved in on the harvests. All the Arran Pilots are now out, the blackcurrents and redcurrents ready for their first picking, the bulk of the broad beans. Been scoffing broad beans in various guises (with chorizo, broad bean houmous)all weekend !

A squash and a squeeze


It seems about this time every year my back goes - nothing to do with the haul of earlies! Came down tonight as we're off next week to Argyll and I wanted to both get my Maris bards out, and get my squashes and pumpkins in - the pumpkins were especially ready. Whilst i started on my two pins, gradually i sunk to my knees as i tried to get the bed cleared, and my back got progressively worse. But they taste delicious, and I even managed to get the calabrase squeezed in as well...

holding back


Whilst the french beans were planted back in April, the small pots seemed to be holding them back - so can't wait for first spuds to come out. Squeezed the beans along the back of the beetroots and cabbages whilst listening to Mak Radcliffe's evening radio programme, this week about new film about Joe Meek; if Telstar can't get the beans going, then I'm not sure will! I always like the fact that no matter how much planning you do, you have to react along the way, so lets see if they perk up...

The Courgettes

A good sunday morning spent constructing the hot bed for the courgettes. I've raised them up because this sorner of the allotment gets wet and seems cold - so by raising up i could use the first batch of compost from home... Three should do us!


Then a good monday evening then tidying up. My favourite time on the allotment - all is quiet, no-ones around, the day is done, usually something good on the radio, and time is called by the darkness. Potted on the kale, the pumpkins, the savoys and the calabrase. Planted more mizuna and some german black turnips and beetroots, and crammed in lettuces in between the autumn cabbages as a catch drop. Also stuck in the celeriac seedlings which seem to be stalling at 1cm high in the greenhouse - hope by covering them I can nurse them to fruition in a well manured bed.

The board beans have looked rather aneamic but think this is due to warm dry weather - have doused twice in last week and they are looking heathier and greener. I've now also got a system for putting the hose in the watering can and watering from there as this means I water the roots of the plants heartily and not the whole bed lightly. This has been leading to lots of 'capping' where the thin layer of water bakes in the heat on the top and creates a hard crust which is then difficult for water to penetrate.

An update on the tatties - all going well, and the first flowers are appearing on the first earlies (see above). When these flowers start to droop then we're ready, 10 or so weeks after planting. Lots of water in the next couple of weeks should swell the tubers so i can get them out, and get the pumpkins and squahes in.