The plot has a distinctly autumnal feel, although we are still enjoying snatches of summer, we seem to be carrying out jobs that we would normally do in early autumn.
Beds are being cleared although it still is too dry to try digging most of them over. The rain that we have had over the last week or so has managed to green up the grass but done little, to more than temporarily, dampen the soil.
We have eased up on the watering but still can't leave the task completely to nature.
I've carried on pruning the fruit canes and bushes that have finished fruiting. The summer raspberries haven't yet made much new growth, as was apparent when I cut away all this year's fruiting canes. I hope they will now make a bit more effort.
The tayberry on the other hand has produced lots of new canes. They tend to be produced much earlier than those of the summer raspberry. They are very prolific. I had already cut out some of the new growth earlier in the year in order to access the fruit. Last week, the old canes were cut away along with some of the new ones and then the remaining canes were tied in to the frame.
More potatoes have been lifted. We had started watering the potato beds so the task of digging was somewhat easier. Osprey and Kestrel produced better crops than the varieties lifted earlier, so we wonder whether they benefited from the late watering. Nadine didn't produce as well but then again their tops had died off completely before we started watering.
After lifting these potatoes, Martyn managed to go over the bed with a tiller and so we plan to plant autumn onions and maybe some garlic in the vacated space. We just need the sets to appear in the garden centres.
For quite a few years, we have had a problem with some overwintering brassicas, purple sprouting broccoli is just one that we have struggled with. We don't know whether clubroot is an issue as, we can't find clubroot resistant varieties of many overwintering brassicas, or whether it is down to our timing. Maybe we have planted out too late. This year we have made an effort to get the plants in the ground earlier. We keep trying. Last week the PSB was added to the overwintering cabbage and cauliflower planted a couple of weeks ago.
|
20 August |
Our second bed of brassicas which, are all club root resistant varieties, are now coming to maturity and we are enjoying lots of cauliflower and cabbages
We've also been harvesting heads of Monclano calabrese from this bed.
|
21 August |
This year the greengage trees have excelled and fruit is being harvested by the bucketful. The freezers are full so we have had plenty to give away. So far we have picked most of our fruit from Reine Claude. The fruit on our other tree, Mannings, isn't yet quite ripe meaning that there is plenty of fruit left to come.
The plum trees have done well too. We have moved on from picking Oullins Gage and are now harvesting Victoria plums.
I'd never really noticed before that the greengages and plums produce fruit clusters rather differently. Greengages seem to produce their fruit in 'strings' whereas plums seems to produce theirs in clusters.
The wasps are still keeping their distance and allowing us to pick the fruit in safety.
We are now harvesting carrots of a much more respectable size.
|
23 August |
We picked our first sweetcorn cob last week.
Our harvest boxes were less bountiful last week as we are more or less just picking fruit and vegetables as we need them.
|
25 August |
Apples from the plot are replenishing our fruit bowls or in the case of the Bramley apples being combined with the blackberries to make a crumble. The small Bramley apple tree has produced quite a few fruits but as with many other of our apples, the individual fruits are smaller than expected.
Greengages and apples are providing us with a mid afternoon snack when working on the plot
We are still managing to gather small posies of sweet peas although most of the flowers being produced are almost stemless, however our other flower beds are stepping up to fill the gap.
As I carry buckets of cut flowers, bees often follow me around the plot. They seem to prefer the flowers that I have cut to the ones left behind.
This week I am linking to harvest Monday hosted on