Early February - Blustery & Grey

Early February - Blustery & Grey
Newly dug over square beds 07/02/11
Showing posts with label purple sprouting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label purple sprouting. Show all posts

Thursday, 12 April 2012

New Season Kicks Off

My lack of blog activity might indicate to you that nothing has been happening on the allotment. Nothing could be further from the truth - it's been a busy time preparing beds and getting seeds either in the ground or in modules and pots.

Here's the summary of developments:
  • I have a new helper called Daniel, who is participating in the Duke of Edinburgh Award scheme. He has elected to choose allomenteering as his new skill, so I get 13 hours of his time over the coming months. So far he has experienced the joys of digging for an hour and the brain zombification of repotting fifty tomato plants (we have gone with six outdoor varieties this season - Gardeners Delight, Ferline, Harbinger, Roma, Marmande and Ailsa Craig). I shall be getting him to rework the plot plan as his next project.
  • My mum & dad have more time to spend assisting, with my mum enthusiastically tidying up the plot and getting seeds in. A good family session up the plot the weekend before last resulting in three rows of Pentland Javelin first earlies going in, plus two rows of Gladiator parsnips and two rows of beetroot (the traditional Italian Barabietola di Chioggia, that has concentric pink & white rings within - a first time grow for me resulting from the tip in River Cottage Handbook No. 4 Veg Patch).
  • We have broad beans on the go in the ground and in pots at home.
  • We have three varieties of French Bean growing in pots - Dwarf Sun Gold, Climbing Cobra and Cosse Violette. 24 plants in total at the moment. We have Barlotti to come too.
  • My Cayenne chili peppers have so far failed to germinate, but the Hungarian Hot Wax have again done well.
  • A tray of salad laves, lettuce, perpetual spinach and chard await germination. A scattering of salad seeds have gone in the plot cold frame. We have a tray of flowers also sat awaiting germination.
  • We still have to get our onions and shallots in the ground - a priority task!
  • The daffodil crop has been disappointing. No sign of any alliums either.
  • I have an A4 page of seeds that need to go in over the next couple of weeks. Vic has already given the green light to a decent session up there this weekend, and if the rain stops this week I will be up there after work in this critical planting period - a period we missed to a large degree this year due to me getting very unwell with my chest.
  • Growing fever is spreading at work. I have half a dozen guys ready to swap tomato plants, an IT manager who has bought himself a greenhouse and has gone seed crazy - I've just been offering a tray of Purple Sprouting - and Suzanne has just taken up the offer of a large plot in West London. As a newbie she's got that mix of excitement, hopes, expectations and fear that is magical. I've already given her a load of seeds that we don't need and plan to off-load any spare seedlings, etc. I can on to her.
I feel much more organised than last year and feel as if we could do really well this season.

Feels like the opening to a football blog...

Monday, 28 March 2011

Sproutlings Update

Finally, after pretty much giving up on the critters, we have some Hungarian Hot Wax sproutings: four of the seeds have germinated, with potentially a few more to follow. They are currently looking quite lonely on the windowsill as all of their tomato and parsley seedling mates - sown at the same time - were pricked, replanted  and relocated down to the greenhouse outside a couple of weeks ago.

Their only company in the house is a plate of sweetcorn kernals sat in damp kitchen in the airing cupboard.

Outside are the tomatoes - a dozen Gardeners Delight (100% germination rate), nine Ferline (75%), and a mere three Harbingers (25%) - and a dozen Giant Italian flat-leaf parsley plants. They are joined by four cucumbers, a load of leeks (the new plantings quickly germinated) and some Summer Purple sprouting (15 plants = 100% germination rate). A tray of Giant Prague celeriac promises seedling action over the coming days.

In an effort to prevent a repeat of the 'greenhouse blown over in the wind' disaster, I have pushed some of the larger pieces of garden furniture up against it for additional support.