I didn't give you an update on our gardening activity last week as a certain woolly tornado nudged my gardening posts to one side.
The first week and a half of May treated us to blue skies and sunny, daylight hours but there was a sting in the tail in that nights were cold and our poor plants must have been totally confused.
We divided our time between working in the garden and on the allotment.
The garden greenhouse was given a sort out. Plants that had survived were tidied and others were removed. The potatoes planted in crates in the foreground are growing well.
The carrots that I sowed in crates are growing well. I had already sown two crates with carrots and radishes. The second lot are just starting to germinate so I have sown a third.
The grey material shown above is made up of wool pellets which we hope will help protect the seedlings from slugs. It seems to work fairly well but is quite expensive and so isn't really economical for widespread use.
We're intending to grow some tomato plants in the raised bed in the garden but, as we are not ready to use the bed for tomatoes at the moment, I've sown some radish and spring onion seeds.
The strawberry runners that I took last year were destined to be planted at the allotment but we decided to keep them in pots in the garden so they have been potted up and popped in a cold frame.
As I usually do, I sowed some annual flower seeds on the allotment last autumn, however slugs munched off most of the seedlings as they emerged. The only seeds that survived were the calendulas. Last week, I resowed the area with more annual flower seeds.
Seeds that were sown earlier at the allotment are germinating but, given that up until last night we'd had no rain for some time, we have had to keep seed beds well watered. We now have to hope that the slugs don't home in on the carrot seedlings.
Parsnips are just beginning to germinate. These can be very hit and miss, when it comes to germination, so we are always glad to see the first seedlings emerge.
As you can see we sow peas very thickly and this seems to produce a good crop. So far there is no weevil damage but I'm sure they will soon be biting notches in the leaves. Hopefully the peas will shrug off any weevil browsing.
The first lot of outdoor planted potatoes pushed through just in time to be greeted by frost which burned the delicate new growth. We had planned to give them some protection but the frost arrived earlier than forecast. Although this may delay a crop, the potatoes will bounce back. Video here
With more frosts expected the potatoes have been given a covering of compost or, for those not planted through weed control fabric, have been earthed up with soil.
As some of the strawberry plants are now on flower, we have also covered the plants with a layer of garden fleece on top of which we have spread a layer of environmesh. Fleece is very flimsy and soon tears in the wind. Frost will blacken the centres of strawberry flowers which would mean no berries so the added protection is worth the effort.
We planted out our first sowing of broad beans. We don't usually stake our broad beans but these plants had become rather leggy, due to their bed not being ready, and so we have had to use stakes to support them.
The early brassica bed went through a stage when the plants looked to be struggling. We suspected that the cold nights were to blame but thankfully they picked up and are now growing well. I just hope that the few frosty nights that are forecast don't set them back again.
Fruits are now beginning to set ...
... including apricots in the garden greenhouse.
As well as planting and watering, we have been rotavating, weeding and cutting grass.
When I was weeding the flower bed that borders one edge of our plot, I was attacked by tiny ants. They are so small that the first you are aware of them is when they start nipping. Wearing gloves offers no protection and I am left with very itchy wrists. At one time we rarely saw ants, but now they are everywhere. I am bitten far too often. Does anyone have any good advice on how I can deter them from biting me or failing that stop the bites itching so much?
May is a hungry month as far as the allotment is concerned. We've picked a few herbs and salad leaves from the garden but I didn't take photos.
One surprise last week was a cauliflower growing amongst the flowering broccoli plants. It was on the point of blowing and wouldn't win a cauliflower beauty contest but was nevertheless a welcome addition to our dinner plates.
Of course a harvest at this time of year always has to include a few sticks of rhubarb.
This week I am linking to harvest Monday hosted on
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