We managed a couple of visits this week and while the change in the weather might be making others grumble, the rain has helped a lot. Most of the squash and brassicas have grown a fair bit and look much greener.

The plots were judged for the annual competition this week so it’s a good job we’d done a lot of weeding last time. While I doubt we’re in line for any prizes we can at least be proud of how both plots look, especially given everything else that we’ve had to do this year! The results will be announced at the summer show so watch this space. One area he thought some members needed to improve on was composting. It’s odd as we’ve composted right from the start and it seems so obviously helpful that its hard to see why people wouldn’t compost! Maybe they just need a bit more information about how to get started. On that theme, Neil gave the compost bays on plot 118 a good working over. There was quite a bit of couch grass in one of the bays that we’d stored manure in which he cleared and he managed to get a couple of barrows of compost out of the bays for spreading around.

Neil was very much getting jobs ticked off the list! He did some tidying of the back of plot 118 and so I put some chippings down to keep it looking neat. He repaired the back gate which had somehow come away from its concrete post. But the best job was building a new front gate! It had been made out of pallet pieces but over time the screws holding the fastenings in were coming loose in the wood as it was slowly disintegrating. In fact the whole latch had fallen off on Saturday meaning it couldn’t be locked. Cue a trip to buy some wood and hey presto we have a lovely new gate! He even managed to get a coat of green woodstain on it before the rain started on Sunday afternoon.

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Meanwhile, I wasn’t exactly slacking! The garlic and the shallots have been looking ready for harvesting for a couple of weeks so I dug them up. The two varieties of garlic are noticeably different in size, with the Lautrec Wight bulbs being almost twice the size. While the Solent Wight has performed well for us previously I might be tempted to just go for one variety next season. I hung the bulbs upside down on the greenhouse staging to dry. Then we’ll be able to see if there are any likely prize winners this year! The shallots looked good. The average size of this banana style variety is much better than the round varieties and I think we’ll get a lot of use out of them as a result. I strung them up in the greenhouse again to dry them out before storing.

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The strawberries that have been growing straight in the ground rather than in the beds on plot 118 have for the last year been looking a bit like they were on the way out. The crops from these are generally smaller and fewer in quantity. We’ve never really been sure of the variety as we inherited them but they are quite seedy too, definitely our poorest performers given how good the others are! So we decided to get rid of them and I dug them all out. We also started collecting some runners off the other strawberries so they can be transplanted later.

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We had a successful batch of small but tasty carrots. Think the key is picking them quite early on, previously we’ve left them a bit longer and they have been holey as if they’ve been eaten by something! So we’ll pull some more up next week. Meanwhile we’ll have to be looking up some good plum recipes as it looks like there will be a bumper crop!

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