Wednesday 15 June 2016

It never rains, but it pours



We might be heading for the wettest June on record, but it's kick started the garden into life.

The courgettes I planted outside a couple of weeks back were just coming into flower a few days back. This morning, I saw the first proper fruit. They're even catching up with the plant in the polytunnel.



Raspberries are going right off on one as well, these are Autumn Bliss, so hopeful of a good crop although I'll take advice on whether they need pruning, because I'm worried they're getting a little bit too dense.

I'm probably going to dig the canes out at the end of the season and start again on another part of the plot. I'm thinking fruit for a few seasons on the beds where the onions have been struck down with the dreaded lurgy.

The first of the potatoes are also coming into flower. Slightly worrying is I dug one of the Duke of York plants last weekend to see what was underneath and the answer was nothing - not a single, measly spludly.

While the foliage has put on a distinct growth spurt over the last week or so, they're still a lot later thsan last year, when we were well into our new potatoes by now.

The worry now is that  this incredible wet spell is going to bring on the blight.
Mini-munch cucumbers, which I've never grown before, look slightly better in the greenhouse.

They're in a kind of ring culture, with 6ins or so of well-rotted manure, topped with 6ins or so of compost, with the plants in those special watering pots which keep the stems dry.

So far, things are looking good with plenty of fruits and flowers on the vines.

But I've been there before with cucumbers, all's going well, the plants start fruiting and then disaster in the form of mosaic virus or stem rot strikes.

Tuesday 7 June 2016

Oniongate and garlic



As Oniongate rages, I've had to start digging the crop to try to salvage some of the bulbs before the rot sets in. Around a third had to go straight onto the skip, the rest is thick-necked but edible for now.

Onions from the allotment didn't store too well last year either, according to some plot holders. The jury's still out on what went wrong, but I'm guessing early planting coupled with wet conditions are prime suspects; aided and abetted by close planting.



In other news, there's success in the same beds where the garlic's also ready to be lifted. Again, there seems to be some kind of rule of thirds in operation.

For while two-thirds of it has plump, solid bulbs, the remainder has either failed to develop, or the bulbs have begun to divide, like the sample on the left.

This is probably another symptom of wet weather. We had a lot of rain spread over several days a week or so back. The plants also have  rust on them, but like last year's crop, this does not seem to affect the bulbs.

 I didn't keep a note of which variety they were, but one group of hardnecks does not seem to have formed bulbs yet, so I've left them in the ground to see how they develop.

Now what to do with the harvested crop? I've decided to try drying bulbs in different places, rather than just string them all up in the greenhouse this year.

Some are in the greenhouse. Some are in the polytunnel, near a mesh door where it's a little airier. Some are in the shed, where it's cooler. Some are outside, which is where you're apparently supposed to dry them off.

I didn't dare hang the ones with rust anywhere near other crops, so have cut the leaves off to within an inch of the bulb for those going in the 'poly and GH.

I wish I'd kept a note of which was which. The one which did very well, with white skin is Marco - the variety you get in supermarkets, but with noticeably bigger bulbs.

The others are a mix of soft and hardnecks including a red-ish one which has performed a little inconsistently.

Finally, there was an extra spicy kind I grew in tubs whose stem has barely reached the thickness of a pencil despite being planted in October with most of the rest.

Garlic remains one of my favourite crops to grow, mainly because you can more or less leave it to get on with it. While it's relatively expensive in the shops, you seldom see more than the same white variety, while if you grow your own there are more than a dozen to try.

It seemed to keep well last year, with the last stored bulb lasting until the middle of February.

This year I was aiming for 60 bulbs - ie just over one a week to see if it would keep until the next crop's ready - and it looks as if we might just about get that as long as the rest doesn't keel over.