Veg plot 2020, #14

[11th July]

We had a bit of family afternoon weeding and generally sorting stuff out in the veg plot today. Fed some lettuce that had run to seed to the chickens, pulled some beetroot that my wife is going to make into soup tomorrow, erected more partridge defences around the peas…

My daughter discovered the delights of freshly-picked peas. The first ones are not quite ready yet — they perhaps need a week more just to fatten up a little, but she popped a few of the fatter pods anyhow. Oh. My. God. Fresh peas, barely fifteen seconds between plant and taste buds. Is there anything in this world that tastes better? So juicy. So sweet. You just can’t buy that. It’s quite possible I’ll have to plant an awful lot more in the future as otherwise I don’t see very many of them making it as far as the kitchen.

Posted in Smallholding, Veg plot | Leave a comment

Veg plot 2020, #13

[6th July]

My wife came in from the garden today and brought me these little bursts of sweetness:

Alpine strawberries. Tiny little things, but so tasty…

I did a bit of weeding and caterpillar squishing in the brassicas this evening and found a few other things to look forward to. We have broccoli on the way.

And a few beans, though they’re not even 10cm long yet.

Inside the polytunnel there are butternut squashes clearly taking shape.

And some of the chiles are looking pretty good

Flowers on the bell peppers are within hours of opening, too.

More weeding is required in both the brassica and legume beds and the peas need more supports to climb so I’ll have to try to get that done this week. I took a third picking off the courgettes before they got too big, so we’ll have those later in the week. Need to sow a few more radishes and spring onions too, I think.

Posted in Smallholding, Veg plot | Leave a comment

Veg plot 2020, #12

[5th July]

My wife has been making (raspberry and gooseberry, though not together) jam this weekend, and cherry pie filling to go in the freezer.

We also picked the largest of the beetroot and had beetroot soup for lunch today (complete with predictable side-effects πŸ™‚ It was very pleasant: beetrooty but not excessively earthy. Whilst checking on progress in the polytunnel I also noticed that we have the first flower buds on the bell peppers. They’ve taken a fair while longer to get started than the chiles. My final planting of peas are also sprouting. I’m keeping them in the greenhouse/cold frame until they get to a few inches tall to keep them away from the slugs and partridge.

Talking of pests, I checked the brassicas where I caught a small white laying eggs last weekend. Clearly I missed some of the eggs as a few leaves are heavily eaten. No sign of the caterpillars however, so I’m guessing that birds or wasps have taken care of them. There are also signs of carrot fly in the carrots. Not much I can do about that now, sadly. Next year I shall grow them under fine netting or fleece.

Posted in Smallholding, Veg plot | Leave a comment

Veg plot 2020, #11

[28th June]

Well, it’s been a bonkers day today. Every time I went outside there was (often horizontal) rain and when I moved into the greenhouse or polytunnel the Sun came out and it was boiling hot!

However, I managed a little planting outdoors and planted the last of the peas in pots in the greenhouse where the partridges can’t get at them: once they’re big enough I’ll plant them out. I also staked up the taller chile and pepper plants , did a bit of thinning of the carrots and took the protective “cages” off most of the brassicas now they’re tall enough to survive the birds. I did however notice a Small White butterfly laying eggs on some of the leaves. The eggs are almost impossible to spot unless you see the butterfly laying them so I shall have to keep an eye out for the caterpillars over the next few weeks. Next year I think I will plant some nasturtiums as a “floral shield” πŸ™‚ And of course they’re edible too, so clearly they belong in the veggie plot. Between them my wife and daughter also picked cherries, raspberries and sugar snap peas. I’m hoping there will be enough raspberries by the end of the season to make some raspberry vodka. I shall pass on the “peapod burgundy” though.

Oh, the thinning of the carrots means we now have a load of baby carrots about ten to twelve mm across the “shoulder” and about 10cm long to go with dinner this week. I’m looking forward to those…

Posted in Smallholding, Veg plot | Leave a comment

Veg plot 2020, #10

[27th June]

Spent much of today out in the garden, but trying to do jobs that didn’t matter when the weather turned ugly or could be abandoned easily — it’s varied between lovely warm sunny skies and driving rain here today. I do plan to get stuff done in the veg plot this weekend, but most things required time so I restricted myself to weeding in the polytunnel. Otherwise my daughter and I spent a fair bit of the day feeding chunks of a large shrub into the shredder prior to putting it on the compost heap. We did a few small pieces of it last week and were somewhat taken with the amazing almond smell when it was shredded. Today we had enough to fill a trailer with the shredded material. It wasn’t until after this evening’s dinner that we thought we should try to work out exactly what plant it was. As things turn out it’s most likely a cherry laurel and the reason it smells so strongly of almonds is that it’s rammed full of cyanide. Bit late to start worrying about that now πŸ™‚

I did lift one of the first early potatoes (International Kidney). The crop was a bit underwhelming though. I think they need a couple more weeks at least. Quite possibly we won’t have a decent crop until the end of July. We’ll have to see how the weather goes.

On the subject of compost heaps I’ve decided to open up a second one. I found some scabby wrinkly tin to put over the top of the first to keep the rain out, held down with some offcuts of concrete block. The new one has started with the laurel chippings followed by some rotting grass clippings, then some of the stuff from the third compost bin that my father-in-law filled last year that hasn’t broken down yet, and some more grass clippings.

The forecast for tomorrow changes every couple of hours, but I’m hoping I can get a bit of planting and other maintenance work done in the veggie plot if the rain will hold off.

Posted in Smallholding, Veg plot | Leave a comment

Arkell’s Kingsdown #2

[21st June]

With the wort cooled down I could pitch the yeast, but first I measured the original gravity with my hydrometer.

Not quite as high as I was hoping for, but I’m happy with that. Then the fermenter went into the fermentation cabinet and it didn’t take long for the yeast to get to work.

Posted in Beer-making, Smallholding | Tagged | Leave a comment

Veg plot 2020, #9 and bees moving house

[21st June]

Somehow I ran out of time to spend more than a few minutes in the veg plot today πŸ™ Too many other things to get done. The compost heap had “sunk” about nine inches since last weekend, but my daughter and I managed to feed three trailers full of tree prunings through the shredder and have filled it up again.

After all the rain we had last week the cardboard box I used to close off the front of the heap is looking a bit worse for wear, but it’s just about holding up. I reckon as stuff packs down then it won’t matter too much anyhow. It is quite warm which is a good sign, though I’m not sure it’s as warm as the one my wife told me about that was on the “Uncle Alan” (Tichmarsh) programme recently where the gardener had used his to cook a joint of beef in a casserole dish wrapped in foil.

I did manage a little tour of the plot this evening and noticed that something has trampled the potatoes.

It looks like the culprit also went through a flower bed outside my father in law’s greenhouse, too. I suspect it may have been a fox chasing something. There were a load of feathers from a Spotted Woodpecker on the grass, so perhaps that was it.

Otherwise, the tallest climbing bean is now taller than me and the flowers are opening on the lowest trusses.

We also have our first sugar snap peas on the way.

I’m really looking forward to the pea crop. You can see where the partridges got to the lower leaves. I’ve not seen them around since I turned the plot into Fort Knox though. Hopefully they’ve got bored and won’t be back.

My final job of the day had to wait (partly) until sunset. At one end of the house I’d stacked some hive parts that were waiting to be cleaned up for re-use, only before I got that far a swarm found a way in where they’d been knocked out of alignment and moved in. Not a major problem, but it’s right next to where the builder is working and he’s seriously allergic to bee venom. He’s been around bees all his life so he’s not uncomfortable with them, but with the recent changeable weather, particularly the thunderstorms, the bees have become much more moody and defensive which isn’t good if you want to avoid being stung.

It’s traditionally said that you can move a hive up to three feet, or more than three miles. Less than three feet and they’ll find it, more than three miles and they’ll learn where they are now is home and are very unlikely to be confused by flying into territory they already know. Anywhere in between and they’ll probably end up flying back to where they came from in the first place. I’ve been told by a beekeeper who swears it’s true and claims to have done it that if you put a load of greenery in front of the entrance of the hive then they know something has changed and re-orient themselves on their new location even if it is near where they came from. So this afternoon I took all the hive boxes apart and realigned them correctly so there was no chance of escape and fixed them all together so I could move the colony in a single go. After they’d stopped flying at sunset we moved them to the new apiary and propped a load of twigs from the prunings we’d been shredding across the front.

Hopefully that will do the job, but just in case I’ve put another hive back where the first came from. It should at least give any stray bees somewhere to collect tomorrow if they do fly to the wrong place, and I can work out what to do after that.

Posted in Bee-keeping, Smallholding, Veg plot | Leave a comment

Return to the beer shack! Arkell’s Kingsdown #1

[20th June]

Brewing is another thing that has taken a back seat of late whilst I tried to get other things finished, but today I finally managed to find some time to start of a brew — a nine gallon batch of Arkell’s Kingsdown made to the recipe in Graham Wheeler’s “Brew Your Own British Real Ale At Home”.

First job was to mill all the grains.

And then set off the mash for ninety minutes.

Finally sparge the mash before transferring it to the boiler.

After the boil I had this lovely-looking wort.

I don’t have a chiller, so now it has to be left overnight to cool sufficiently to pitch the yeast.

Posted in Beer-making, Smallholding | Tagged | Leave a comment

Veg plot 2020, #8

[14th June]

Well, more orchard than veg plot, really. I planted four cherry trees in our orchard some years back. One is a “bitter” type cherry whilst the others are early, mid and late-season dessert cherries. The mid-season tree (which usually gives us the biggest harvest) has almost no fruit whatsoever this year. If I recall correctly it flowered right in the middle of that cold, wet period we had in March when there was nothing likely to pollinate the flowers (it wasn’t the only one — we have very few damsons, gages and plums this year compared with normal). The other dessert trees have plenty of fruit, but they’re still some way off ripe:

Apples and pears are looking good though.

Posted in Orchard, Smallholding | Leave a comment

Veg plot 2020, #7

[June 13th]

It’s been quite a busy day in the garden for us whilst dodging the rain. My daughter mowed the weeds (they always seem to grow even when the grass doesn’t) and between washing batches of bottles for the beer I have that’s just about ready I did quite a bit of weeding in the veggie plot. I suspect that the partridges I mentioned earlier are noshing on our peas and brassicas on a regular basis as they always seem to be in that part of the plot when I go out and there’s a lot of damage to the plants, so I also tried to protect them as best I could. If the partridges won’t stop however they may well find themselves on the lunch menu.

Elsewhere both the standard onions and spring onions are starting to thicken up and the carrots are looking like they’re doing well. The butternut squashes that are outside (which is where the instructions on the packet suggest planting them) aren’t looking too great though. I had one there wasn’t space for and I put that in the polytunnel where it appears to be doing much better so perhaps they just need more warmth or shelter. A few of the potatoes are starting to flower and I think it will be time to lift a few of the first earlies in a couple of weeks to see how they’ve done. The parsnips are also starting to get into decent amounts of leaf at long last and we have some beetroot about the size of a ping pong ball. The chiles I posted a photo of earlier are quite large now too, and despite the abuse some of the peas have flowers.

I just noticed that the climbing beans have their first buds forming too.

What has been quite disappointing are the radishes. They’ve suffered quite badly from root fly, to the point where I may have to consider growing them under fleece.

Also doing well so far this year is the compost heap. Last weekend I used a plasterboard pallet to make a front for the one we’ve been using so far and stuffed an opened-out cardboard box down the inside to stop things falling out. Now it’s almost full.

That’s about two metres square by just over a metre high. Hopefully it will rot down a bit during the week. We still have this lot to feed through the shredder and dump on it.

If the rain holds off there’s more weeding and planting to get done tomorrow. And of course the ground-to-partridge missile system to set up.

Posted in Smallholding, Veg plot | Leave a comment