FRUIT CROPS
Top fruit
The dormant season
may have passed but there is still time to plant fruit trees and bushes as most
plants are containerised today. There is a wide variety of top fruit trees and
soft fruit bushes in garden centres, but care is needed in selecting the right
varieties for your own locality. Some shops and garden centres are selling
plants that may not be suitable for Scottish gardens. The Scottish climate is
wetter and cooler than the south of England, so some popular varieties down south
such as Cox and russet apples are not great up north. However, Discovery, Katy,
Fiesta and Red Devil are all good for our climate, and Bramley is still an
excellent cooking apple in Scotland.
Apple Discovery |
Pear Beurre Hardy
and Concorde seem to do well, but Conference struggles to ripen up properly and
the best flavoured Comice is a sucker for scab disease.
I lost my plum
Victoria to silver leaf disease, but have replaced it with another as it has
always been one of the best varieties.
Peaches grown
outdoors are a gamble on getting a good year. Pollination of flowers is a real
struggle and in our wetter cooler climate peach leaf curl is a major problem.
Cherries are a
better prospect now that they can be grown on a dwarfing rootstock such as
Gisela 5, but you need to know that they are on that stock otherwise they will
grow so big that netting is impossible and the local blackbirds will reap the
harvest.
Soft Fruit
Strawberry Flamenco |
I still await my new
Big Ben blackcurrant to show me if I really do have a bigger and sweeter berry
than my lovely Ben Conan. I enjoy eating fresh blackcurrants straight from the
bush when fully ripe, but are we ready to munch our way through a whole punnet
then go back for some more.
This will also be
the year to sample my first autumn fruited raspberries Polka and Autumn
Treasure said to be much bigger than Autumn Bliss, and at the same time my new
blackberry Reuben claimed in catalogues to be much sweeter and twice as big as
other brambles. Reuben is a primocane bramble fruiting on canes grown in the
same year.
Sophie picking grape Phoenix |
My other venture
into the unknown is my variety trial of grapes grown outdoors on south facing
fences hoping to find the perfect Scottish grown grape. Earlier plantings gave
a lot of promise before phytophthora root rot took out two good varieties,
Rondo and Regent, both of which had given me small bunches of ripe grapes.
These have now been replaced on land hopefully free from this disease. Solaris
has been grown for several years and although slow to establish, did give me a
couple of small bunches of Muscat flavoured grapes last year. Muscat Bleu and
Polo Muscat are now well established so maybe I will get some grapes this
autumn. Phoenix has somehow survived on my diseased ground, and had three
bunches last year. Growth has started well this year, so could be another
winner if we can get a good warm and sunny autumn.
Saskatoons ready to pick |
New varieties of
saskatoons such as Martin, Northline JB30 and Pembina as well as Smoky and
Thiessen have arrived in Scotland and will soon be available.
Strawberry Mae is
just about ready under tunnels, then fresh strawberries will continue all
summer with Elsanta, Florence
and Symphony, then into autumn with Flamenco.
Wee jobs to do this week
Start thinning out
any seedling of radish, lettuce, parsnips, turnips or even beetroot before they
get too big. Lettuce thinnings can be used to increase supply if required and
planted as an intercrop between sprouts or other slower growing fruit or
vegetables.
Annuals sown in rows
can be thinned out or used as transplants. Some types sown in cellular trays
can now be planted out as plugs. I use Livingston daisies and poppies this way.
They are perfect for adding colour to areas devoted to my aconites and
snowdrops which will soon be dormant.
END