Gardening blog
Week forty one October 7th - October 14th
2006
Thursday 12th October 2006 It has been a lovely warm still day. I am now getting back
into serious digging mode spring cabbages need to be planted out and it is time to start sowing the autumn sown broad
beans
again.
I save
my
own
seed
from year to year and over the years it has become a bit of a mixture of varieties.
However, they are all from plants that made it through the previous winter
so they must be hardy enough to stand out current weather conditions.
Bought half a dozen spring cabbage plants.
Dug up taeberry and split into two plants.
There seems to be supprisingly little information re Taeberrys on the www judging by the results of my Google search. It seems that no one can be found offering Taeberry plants for sale or with photographs of the taeberry fruit.
2005
Tuesday October 11th 2005 It was warm like a mid summers day at lunchtime
today - indeed it was much warmer than most of our August days this year. I
put some extra supers on several of the bee hives as they were so busy making
honey. I watered the seedling onions that I planted out on Sunday as it is
difficult to see when we may get rain again.
Monday October 10th 2005 Another warm sunny day. I'm digging an area to sow
broad beans in but I guess this warm weather means that there is no real rush
to get them sown.
Sunday October 9th 2005 another wonderful warm sunny day. Possibly a little
dry for planting out onion seedlings - so I'm now hoping for rain. My Abutilon
vitifolium cutting have rooted well and I've planted out one pot full
(8 or 9 plants) in a corner in the allotment greenhouse. I first planted
this shrub in the garden just a couple of years ago (internal
link) and
it has grown rapidity to become a large 12 ft high plant. The strongest
large growing tips to the main branches made the most successful cuttings
although many of the smaller side shoots were also successful. I've started
digging an area to sow the Autumn broad beans in.
Saturday October 8th 2005 The Japanese onion seed sown at the beginning
of August
germinated
well
and
I'm
going
to plant
out
some
of
the
seedlings
this
weekend.
This
is earlier
than I have done it before so it will interesting to see what kind of results
I get.
I taken another load of honey of the Old Costesey hives today. It seems
there is no end to honey production this year.
2004
October
10th 2004 Planted 4 snowdrops Sam Arnott. Planted 50 Crocus tommasinianus
Ruby Giant (on the left) and 50 Whitewell Purple (on the right) of the
central old Worcester Pearman apple tree in my allotment that I have
been pruning into shape for years now. The crocus have been planted for
the bees. Planted four rows of broad beans in Geoff's extra
allotment apiary. The ones planted last year were pulled after cropping
extra muck dug in and two rows of leeks planted in their place which
are ready for cropping anytime now but go on growing until the spring.
2003
Sunday
11th October 2003 Planted out the last of the Japanese onion sets.
I now have five rows in all planted on three dates the first ones planted
are already three or four inches high we will see which ones if any
decide to bolt next year . Finished planting the garlic that I started
yesterday. I have planted my garlic earlier this year than I have in
previous years but I don't think it will make much difference.
Saturday
10 October 2003 I have an old oil drum water butt that can no longer function
due to numerous holes so I have started to use it for burning the weeds. The
resulting ash is easy to apply back to the ground. I haven't done much burning
in the past preferring to compost rather than burn but I am now having a blitz
on those annoying creeping weeds like spear grass and columbine . I
have planted a long row of garlic where there were potatoes last year
and further on stretching under the apple tree I have also cleared
and dug over the ground under the tree top dressed it with the ash
(as I did the garlic) from my burning bin but so far put nothing in
it.
2000
Sunday
7th October Potatoes are a great crop to grow if you want to clear the
ground of weeds. I was thinking about this piece of advice as I was digging
my main crop potatoes today. Not a great crop, as the seed was purchased
and planted out late in the season. They were, however, still worth digging
up even though the foliage suffered from the blight and I had to cut
the tops off and burn them earlier in the summer. After a wet year like
this one, ideal for blight, it will be more important next year to be
ruthless on removing the volunteers and not allow them grow on with the
possibility carrying this year's infection forward to next year. After
digging the potatoes and weeding as I went the soil was in ideal condition
for sowing onion sets. I haven't fed the soil for this crop as yet intending
to give them some well-rotted compost in the spring. Although I may only
liquid feed them. I'm bringing home dried seed pods on every visit the
allotment now, from the low growing French beans, the stick grown Blue
Lake, my Piebald Pea Beans, and of course the Laslett Black Improved
runner bean. All get sorted by number of seeds in a pod, put into a paper
bag, and stored in a kitchen draw in a shoe box. (If anybody is interested
in swapping seeds please email me: patrick@laslett.info) It will soon
be time to sort through the seed box and take out the Broad Bean seed
for this year's autumn sowing (normally around the 6th of November for
me).Autumn sown Broad Beans must be just the about the most successful
crop on my plot. They take a week or two to come through the ground after
sowing and grow slowly through the winter. They have few fatal pests
apart from the mice that like to dig them up for a winter-feed. In spring
they provide a feast for some insect that notches the leaves all around
the edges, but this meal doesn't seem to do the beans any harm. They
are easy to look after and don't require large amounts of fertiliser
if your soil is in good shape, except a few handfuls of wood ash applied
between the rows during the winter. I sow mine in double rows that I
can hoe between and each bean about eight to ten inches apart.
Autumn
sown beans are much less likely to play host to the black bean avid and can easily
have their tips nipped out if there is any sign of black fly. The seed, after
your first year, costs nothing, as it is so easy to save your own seed. If the
rows are well hoed and weeded in the begging of the year there are few weeds
that can compete with the beans once the they get growing. After the bean plants
have cropped they have nitrogen nodules on the roots so the stems can be cut
off a few inches from the ground and left to dry up (the tops being removed to
the compost heap) whilst a row of Sprouting broccoli or winter cauliflower planted
in the space between the two rows. The soil that was hoed all through the previous
winter, is one stretch of ground that doesn't need digging again until after
the brassica have finished, by which time the soil will need some organic matter
dug in again (although you can, of course, pull all the plants up and prepare
the soil again and plant in clear ground).
Potatoes
or onions could then grown in that stretch of ground before the beans are sown
there again.