SUMMER FRUITS
This year will go
down as one of the hottest in memory, and it has been brilliant for most fruit
crops. They got off to a poor start after a miserable winter with the “Beast
from the East” and a non existent spring lacking sunshine, but fruit tree
pollination was excellent on trees covered in masses of flowers. The potential
was strong for a good fruit harvest, though it would be about three to four
weeks late due to rotten climate at the beginning of the year.
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Anna picks Big Ben blackcurrants |
However, along
came the heat wave lasting a couple of months and crops made up for lost time,
though some ripened fast and cropped heavily, but over a shorter period. Although
the long hot sunny days were a tonic it came with very dry weather so constant
watering was necessary to keep plants alive.
Strawberries were first off the block. Fruits were large
and sweet with early, midseason and autumn fruiting varieties all fruiting
together. Unfortunately that this gave us a glut, then from mid July onwards
there was none left. I hope my autumn perpetual variety Flamenco picks up again
as we go through summer. At City Road Allotments everyone was getting great
crops, so although I never
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Saskatoons in fruit |
netted all my strawberry rows, I only noticed two
berries which the local blackbirds had eaten. They could have been spoiled for
choice.
Blackcurrants got picked in early July with massive crops
and huge berries. Big Ben was smaller than expected but very sweet, whereas Ben
Conan was not so sweet but fruit size was huge. Crops gave us plenty to eat
fresh, some for compote, some for jam, some in the freezer for future use and
enough for my three demijohns of wine.
Redcurrants were very sweet but did not crop as heavily
as last year, so no redcurrant wine brewing in 2018. They also suffered a bad
attack of leaf blister aphids.
Gooseberries gave a massive crop which weighed many
branches down to the ground and sawfly maggots swarmed out when I took my eye
off the ball for a couple of days. I just managed to tackle them with a quick
spray before they did too much damage. Huge crops will give plenty for the
kitchen and I will get my three demijohns of vintage gooseberry wine. Some
berries were lost due to hot sunshine blistering the fruit making it unusable.
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Raspberry Glen Dee |
Raspberries were doing just fine putting on a lot of
growth in the sunny weather coupled with my constant watering, then along came
the early summer gales and two rows got flattened. Strong tall cane growth with
full foliage cover got hit so hard that the supporting posts broke off at
ground level and flattened a couple of rows. Once the gale died down Glen Dee
got its posts replaced, but a lot of canes of autumn fruiting Polka snapped off
at ground level. Picking continues however on Glen Dee and Glen Fyne, and the
remnants of Polka are also producing a crop of massive berries.
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Apple The Oslin |
Saskatoons are having a fantastic year with heavy crops
of large sweet black fruiting bunches easy to pick. Nets were put in place in
mid July, but this year there is no sign of our marauding blackbird. Plenty
fruits to eat, freeze and brew, as this makes another fantastic wine after its
three years maturing in demijohns.
Bramble Helen was always reliable to give the first fruits
in August, but this year the first fruits were ready in mid July, and sweeter
than ever.
Apple Oslin, the Arbroath Pippin is usually my first
apple of the season. It is quite delicious, but can suffer a lot of brown rot
in a bad year, but not this year without any rain. First fruits were picked at
the end of July, with more to follow and Discovery ripening fast so not far
behind.
Wee jobs to do this week
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Pea crops in succession |
Many crops such as
salads, onions, turnips, beetroot, peas and early potatoes are ripening ahead of
normal due to the hot summer and some three years old strawberry beds which
have finished cropping are getting grubbed out. All of these areas can be used
for another quick maturing crop of lettuce, spring onions, rocket, radish and
early peas. Give them a light fork over, firm down, raking level and adding
some fertiliser before sowing. Watering will be essential if the ground is dry.
END