Monday 22 October 2012

Evil chilli

http://i.imgur.com/CmfZV.jpg

Had to repost this, it made me laugh, created by my brother!
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Herb garden and pond!

Well Baz has been really productive up at the allotment these last couple of weeks, putting a small, but very lovely pond in, and creating our 'infinity herb garden'. He's also moved the rosemary to the top corner of the plot, which I completely failed to even notice when I went to the allotment yesterday, oops, but have seen in the photos I just uploaded. It's all looking really good at the moment, even though there are still areas that need a lot of work, and there are some empty beds, which in the future, during the winter, will have in them either over-wintering crops or green manure.

Here are some pics of the last couple of weeks-



Above: the new herb garden!




Above: how it's all looking from the top.



Above: our first harvest of Jerusalem artichokes.


Above: the rosemary in it's new home.




Above: Baz and Caleb chasing each other around the plot!!
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Sunday 7 October 2012

Just spent a couple of hours at the plot.

We harvested quite a bit today-


We finally got some red chillies, so picked one of those today, a few raspberries, two tomatoes, loads of French beans, cucumber, salad leaves, chard, and lots of spuds, plus one of the squashes, which we picked last week, but hadn't brought any home till now.

I took a photo of each of the beds, so here they are starting at the top left and going down to the shed-


Above and below you can see the green manure starting to show.








 Above are the raspberries.
 Above are the Jerusalem artichokes.

Above- French beans, which I made a support for today. Besides the cucumbers, these are the best crop this year.

 Above- I always forget what these are, but I think they are Brussel sprouts.....?




I am SO excited that after all the blight and other things going wrong with the 25 tomato plants I started earlier in the year, today I picked the first, edible, actually delicious, tomatoes!!! Me, Baz and Fern each had one and a third tomatoes with our dinner. Here are the rest-

Here are the chillies and cucumbers in the polytunnel-




I will leave you with a few more pics, oh, we decided on a great idea today for the herbs, I thought it would be cool to have them in a circular-y bed, so we decided on an eight shape, and Baz started to prepare the area. Oh and we also changed the plan slightly so that we're going to move the compost down towards the shed and put the fruit trees near the polytunnel, with the herbs going in between.
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Friday 5 October 2012

September

So it's been quite a while since I've written on here.

We were away for two and a bit weeks in August, during which time my cousin and her son looked after things for us, watering, harvesting and making sure things were ok. When we got back at the beginning of September, there were hundreds of runner beans waiting to be picked, as well as French beans, huge marrows, loads of cucumbers, and chillies.




Here is one of the marrows!!!


Above- one of our harvests in September.


Runner beans anyone?!


Struggling to find the right 'Carry On..' inspired caption...


Below- Some of the leaves on the Jerusalem artichoke plants had gone like this:-



I don't really know what it was though and since I took all these dead looking leaves and stems off, it's been doing really well, except for the fact that the really strong winds we had a couple of weeks ago blew all the plants over so Baz had to cut them right down. I'm hoping that they'll be ready to pick soon. Yum. We discovered when we used to get a veg box a few years ago that if you roast them (with skins on) they are really tasty.


Above- another one of our recent harvests. We need to grow some other coloured veg I am thinking.


Above- how it was all looking in mid-September, from the bottom. You can see that the area on the left is full of weeds and we will be working on this area in the autumn/winter.


Above- so I'm pretty sure that our tomatoes got blight. But I have managed to save a few of the plants and we now have a whole two red tomatoes nearly ready to pick and a collection of other ones I'm hoping will ripen and be edible.


Above- here is the tomato plant with the blight (I think) showing on the leaves and on the stems.


Above is the cucumber plant which pretty much monopolised the polytunnel this summer, due to us not trimming it back and leaving it to take over. I have since cut a little bit off and attached some of the plant to string which is attached to the beam running above at the top of the polytunnel. But I don't think you can really tell that well from the pictures above and below. It's now pretty much dying off. These are pictures from about two or three weeks ago.


 
Above is one of the chillies we have grown. Unfortunately all the labels I put in the chilli plants I started off got mixed up so I couldn't tell you which type of chilli it is. But I can tell you it's quite a hot one! I was going to try and preserve a few in olive oil but Baz decided to freeze them instead.

I was hoping to do some seed saving this year, but so far I haven't done any. I have gone back through my notes I made though from my food growing course from a couple of years ago and found this article which I've made notes from too, so I'm going to try with the cucumbers, French and runner beans and possibly the chillies. The cucumbers have stopped producing fruit now, I had planned on trying to pickle a few into gherkins, but that'll have to wait until next year because we've eaten them all now. The cucumbers, which came from a plant my friend Sam gave me, have been one of the best crops this year. We have had at least 30 or so, and apart from a couple which we let get too big so couldn't really eat with the skins on, they've been so tasty! We will definitely be growing them again.


The last couple of weekends we have been sowing green manure seeds for over-wintering in the beds which don't have anything in. We bought two types- Phacelia Tanacetifolia and Mustard (White) both from Homebase, which I'm not totally happy about because we should have got organised and ordered some different ones from a nice online organic website, but we didn't. Anyway, these two can be sown up until September so last weekend (the 29th/30th) was the last weekend in theory that we could sow it. We managed to do about 5 or 6 beds, a couple were just half beds, and the first lot I put in about two weeks ago is already coming up.

It'll be two years soon since we first took up a plot on this allotment site, but 6 months of that was on our original plot and a few months of not having a plot at all. 

Hasta la vista.
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