Summer days

Another glorious summers day in Manchester arrived today.  Oh no, hang on, sarcasm is quite difficult to do in a blog!  It’s pretty much been non-stop rain today so we didn’t get much done.  Handily enough though we don’t really have a lot to do anyway.  Allotmenting is a pretty curious beast – just at the point you think it’s going to be all hands on deck for the summer, well that’s the exact point when you don’t have to do very much.  We had a bit of weeding to do and the plants in the greenhouse needed a good watering and that was about it really.   The greenhouse plants seem to be doing really well – we had our first tomato and sweet pepper on Saturday.

   

We had another good harvest – plenty of runner beans, potatoes, salad leaves, cucumbers (we are currently a bit overrun with them), a few courgettes, thyme, mint and chives.  The courgettes are proving to be curious things.  We have four plants and the two yellow courgette plants are going great guns producing quite a few fruits (I had a quick discussion with Pilla, and we *think* it’s a fruit) the green courgettes are proving a little more stubborn.  This is despite the fact that they have lived side by side since the first leaves appeared.  Why the difference?  Who knows!

 

Some of our garlic has flopped over so we took the opportunity to dig one up see how it was doing – and it’s actually a pretty good size.  We’ve left it drying out in the greenhouse, I’ll try and take a picture next week.  Pilla had some Treasurer duties to attend to by signing up a new plot holder and that was pretty much it – we were home for lunch.  In the depths of winter we would have loved a few allotment days like that!

They Call Me Mellow Yellow

  

Colour all round at the allotment and mainly sunshine yellow hues! We have blooming sunflowers, opening courgette flowers and a pre-allotment breakfast of little eggs from the chickens. After the monthly allotment meeting yesterday we got straight to work. I was potting on the chillies into the florist buckets as they had started to flower and the hope is that with a bit more room we might get some fruit on them at the end of the season. We ran out of compost before I could do the same for all of the habaneros so this remains on the list of things to do. Meanwhile, Neil put his DIY skills to the test and set about drilling large holes out of a tall bin which he then partially filled with compost. He then carefully planted the strawberry plants Bob gave us so that theyare hanging out of the holes. The bin will be further filled once the runners in our strawberry beds are established. These won’t fruit until next year but they really couldn’t wait in their small pots any longer.

  

Exciting things happening in the greenhouse. We have a few little sweet peppers emerging, see above for our largest specimen thus far. If they continue at this rate we will get a good return from our four plants which will be a bonus as I think we were sceptical we would get anything at all. Neil had some aubergine tickling to do, with the help of a second hand paint brush. This followed a week of research in which opinion seemed to be divided. Some aubergines are apparently self pollinating whilst others require a bit of a helping hand. Not knowing whether ours were the former or the latter we thought it was better to play it safe and give them a tickle inside their flowers to distribute their pollen. Fingers crossed for the results! It was also time to plant out the dill and sage that had been started in the greenhouse. They are both looking a bit leggy so hopefully some fresh air will strengthen them up. A special mention goes to a new addition to our allotment equipment in the form of an old desk we recycled from beside the bins in our flat! Very useful for potting and DIY tasks but it may need a coat of varnish so it doesn’t perish.

It has been a good week for harvesting produce with a lots of lettuce and beans to bring home and I must say it is making us feel very healthy and virtuous! There is nothing quite like the taste of a fresh homegrown raspberry. 

   

 

Summer holidays – cancelled from now on

Before I talk about our plot, something happened to someone else’s plot whilst we were away.   I’m not going to talk about the details, but I’m shocked and saddened that anyone would cause that amount of pointless damage.  We’ll probably never know what happened, but why anyone would do that to someone who spends so much of his time helping others, welcoming newcomers, generally making everyone feel at home there and being an absolute star on the site is beyond me.  Idiots.

Right then, after getting thoroughly de-gunked from the Glastonbury trip (and oh how smug we were walking  through the ‘grow your own’ section in the Greenpeace field.  Been there, doing that) we headed down to our plot.  We’d not been there for six days.  Nothing could change that much in six days, right?

 

Err, wrong.  Meet our second cucumber (and the third, fourth, fifth, sixth etc etc are almost ready).  It is a monster.  It almost doesn’t fit in the fridge.  I measured it at 34 cm’s long.  I feel we are about to be overwhelmed with cucumbers.

 

The aubergines in the greenhouse have grown a lot.  They look about twice as big as they were last week and quite a few have flowers.  We have green tomatoes all over the tomato plants now- the variety in the picture is the stripey Tigerella.  Bob looked after our greenhouse plants last week, which is perhaps why they are looking so healthy!

 

Outside, things seem to have moved up a gear too.  We have our first courgette flowers – these grow even faster than cucumbers by all accounts.  Pilla has been stocking up on recipes in preparation – I think one is a vegatable muffin which sounds interesting!  We have quite a few broadbeans ready to pick, a few sugarsnap peas, the french beans too and the runner beans are slowly developing bean pods.

 

We also have signs of proper little blueberries.  The internet dating we arranged with Debbie’s blueberry bushes has obviously gone well.  The carrot tubs are looking very bushy and so we dug up a carrot just to see how they were getting on – Pilla is beautifully modelling a variety.  I say ‘variety’ because I think I have mixed up the labels – we have three types, this one should have been ‘Purple Haze’ but it is looking distinctly unpurple right now.  We had our first plants bolting in the heat however.  We dug up a few mizuna plants because they have grown massive flowers (how a tiny lettuce can grow a three foot flower in six days is beyond me) and the rocket has done the same.  They both grow quickly so we intend to sow some more seeds at the weekend.

Apart from running around the plot checking what else has grown, we only did a bit of watering, planted out the Jack o’Lantern squash plant and grabbed a few strawberries before rushing off.   Thanks to Bob (again) we got enough strawberries for our pudding this evening.

Little Helpers

It was all set to be a rather cold, wet and lonely allotment experience today as Neil is ‘working’ in Abu Dhabi. And so while he was on the beach in 40 degree heat I was putting on the layers to brave the wintery conditions that befell Manchester this week. Which meant that it was a lovely surprise to be visited by Pete and Suzy and the boys (‘hello William and Alex!). I think that we have two budding gardeners on our hands as they seemed to know what lots of the plants are and were keen to explore the ones that they hadn’t seen before. Alex seems to have an affinity with the chickens but we drew the line at allowing him into the chicken run despite his requests!

I seemed to have quite a few jobs to do today, I think perhaps Neil engineered this for the week that he is away to keep me busy! So what with the monthly meeting first thing this morning it meant it was a longer day at the plot than expected and ironically when I left at 4.45pm it was the best weather of the day.

 

Good news in the greenhouse – our first fledgling tomato! No, I am not hallucinating, look closer and you will see a little green nubbin of a tomato. Ahh, so proud. Most of the other plants have yellow flowers on, so I gave them all some tomato food. We will have to keep feeding them about once a week from now on.

  

Our coldframe was stuffed to the brim so it was time to plant out the courgettes. We have both green (Zucchini) and yellow (F1 Jemmer). Courgette plants are notorious for producing a huge amount, the more you pick the more they grow, so I only planted out two of each colour and even then it might be a bit of a squeeze once they start getting bushy. A handy tip from our current issue of Grow Your Own magazine is to sink the top half of a plastic juice bottle upside down into the soil near the base of the plants so that they can be fed and watered via this direct to their roots as they are quite greedy. No sooner had I planted the courgettes out the coldframe was full again! This week the sweetcorn and curly kale are being hardened off.

 

 

The next job was a bit of a rescue attempt. Neil had planted out the peas and the dwarf beans in the last fortnight and they were quite ‘leggy’. Neil ran some twine round the peas to encourage them to twist around but had run out of time to do the same with the beans. They seemed like they were perking up a bit last week but in the meantime there has been almost torrential rain for a couple of days so when I arrived on site today they were almost horizontal on the soil! I managed to tease the peas a bit taller on the string but they were actually winding round quite well. I also planted a few extra peas along the line as they can be planted quite tightly. I then ran some string around the beans and threaded them through and they look much better already. In fact one of the plants has its first flower so maybe in the next few weeks they will all be blooming!

Lastly, I planted out some red and green lettuce (lollo rosso and lollo biondi) from the greenhouse and the gem lettuces that Bob kindly gave us a few weeks ago. Fingers crossed they don’t look too tempting a treat for any birds/slugs/mice! Next week will involve more planting out of things from the coldframe and maybe some potting on in the greenhouse but it really does feel like we are on the home straight and the greenhouse is looking positively empty in comparison with the last few months. All we need now are things to eat!