Friday, April 25, 2008

More frog spawn!



Well, since descovering frog spawn in my pond last month it's snowed and hailed and generally been really cold, so the tadpoles were developing very slowly. The picture below illustrates the little tads emerging from their jelly balls. I've since found another blob of frog spawn (above) and the first lot of tadpoles are waiting around the edge of the new spawn probably picking them off one by one, tasty.

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Note to readers

In case you are wondering, I'm trying to catch up with myself, so I'm blogging for the whole of April so far and I'm trying to date them in rough chronological order. Bare with me, it's just that I've done so many things lately that I think warrant a posting.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Chitted potato

The variety here is the International Kidney - otherwise known as a Jersey Royal, except you aren't allowed to call them this if they are not grown on Jersey. So there.


Potatoes



Most of the potatoes have been planted by digging a trench, about a spade width and depth, plonking the chitted potatoes in, eyes up, and scooping the soil back over the top, leaving enough soil in the ridge for earthing up in about a months time.




Below are pictures of the first earlies going in, Pentland Javelin, I decided to plant this row by digging an individual hole per potato, just an experiment to see the benefit of trenches.

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Lovely view of plot



Onions



Also in April - the onion sets and shallots got put in - all 43thousand of them. If I never see another onion set in my life it'll be too soon.




Fed the Japanese onions that went in back in the Autumn - Senshyu Yellow. Used chicken pellet manure.

Monday, April 14, 2008

Early promise


Sunday, April 13, 2008

Lavender plants from seed

I got a free packet of seed for a fragrant lavender called Spicea Rosea. Sowed them last summer and they're getting to be quite nice little plants now. They can go into my lavender hedge when they're big enough.


Thursday, April 10, 2008

Neatening up

After the plot was rotovated I had to do some cutting in around the waney edge.


Weaving wigwams

Using hazel and cherry poles and whippy willow I made an attempt at making some climbing supports for my peas and sweet peas.





The wigwam below on the left I put in last year but it needed shoring up with the weight of the passion flower climbing up it.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Spinach


Planted a couple of rows of spinach plants that were already in plot3. Don't know how well they transplant, we'll have to wait and see.


Scaffold board edging

I've only got a few scaffold boards left from my last scrounge so I stuck them in along the edge between plots 2 and 3, where the path crumbles away. Would be so nice to do the whole path both sides, for each plot but I just don't have the timber. Makes it so easy to strim the grass to an edge.


Tuesday, April 8, 2008

The revolution will be rotovated



Oh I gave in to the temptation - got my plot rotovated didn't I, by very kind man who offered, took him about 20 minutes what probably would have taken me about three weeks. I know I was going to dig by hand but it seemed to make sense, it means I can get on with other jobs and it looks fabulous. If I'd had the plot last Autumn, I'd have dug it manually but getting it only a month ago I was running out of time to get anything in. Anyway, I've never rotovated before, so I'll let me off the hook. So exciting though, looking at a vast expanse of soil. All the potential....

Monday, April 7, 2008

Digging the plot

I'm making good progress with my new plot, removing weeds as I go. It has to be the right sort of weather though, not dry because the ground sets like concrete and if its too wet you can't weed properly as the weeds stick to the fork and your gloves.

Digging progress

This digging and weeding is very difficult, the ground is compacted and full of perenial weeds. Progress is slow. But hanging on in there.

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Broad beans are flowering (Autumn sown)


Saturday, April 5, 2008

Carrot tubs

These were a great success last year so I changed the compost in the bins, making it light and sandy and sowed myself a swirl of 'rainbow' carrots and diagonal lines of 'purple haze'. I used the sand to mark out where I put the small seeds so I can see them when they germinate. Any container above the ground by 18" is said to be too tall for the carrot fly and they don't lay their eggs.

Friday, April 4, 2008

Planting parsnips



I decided to use a slightly different method of germination with my parsnips this year. Back in March I scattered the seed on wet paper towels to speed up the process. The ones that germinated got planted in rows of sand sprinkled on a prepared bed at the beginning of April. This just means they've hit the ground running rather than sitting in cold soil deciding they may or may not germinate. Anyway I'll let you know how this experiment works.