AN EARLY HARVEST BEGINS
The 2017 weather has been unbelievable for gardeners so far.
The long dry spring with plenty sun warmed up the soil, then just when we
needed some moisture for planting, down came the rain. This was followed by a
few dry sunny days. Perfect for planting and sowing, but moisture had just gone
down a few inches with dry soil underneath, but worry not, along came another
couple of days of torrential rain to make up the deficit. You could not wish
for better weather.
Thinning beetroot |
So every dry sunny day let us catch up with numerous gardening
tasks.
This has been perfect growing weather, so salads such as
lettuce, radish, rocket and spring onions matured early and harvesting started
at the end of May. Fresh salads picked twenty minutes before they are on the
plate could not be more tasty and healthy.
However salads do not last long as they all mature together
and after about three weeks they are gone, so successional sowings are made to
cover the summer and autumn periods. Fast maturing salads can be intercropped
between slower growing crops with wide spacings such as sweet corn and brussels
sprouts. Other space becomes available when existing salads are cleared and
early potatoes start to get lifted.
Casablanca
first early potatoes had the first sample shaws dug up at the end of May.
Although this is a salad potato, size was still on the small side but hopefully
will improve after another week. The small spuds were delicious and although
the crops harvested early lacked in size, the freshness and flavour made it
well worth while.
Lettuce Lollo Rosso |
Other young seedlings such as carrots, turnip, Swedes,
beetroot, mizuna and all the salad successional sowings are in need of
thinning, but the warm sunny days made this quite a pleasant task. I usually
perform thinning over two operations to allow for any pest damage taking out a
few more plants.
Pea Kelvedon Wonder is now three feet tall and full of
flowers and a later sowing of Hurst Green Shaft is well through the ground and
looking strong. These will soon need stakes, netting or other means to support
them.
Currant leaf blister aphid |
There is always a feeling of summer has arrived once the
first strawberries are ripe for picking. Last year I started towards the end of
May, but this year with different varieties my first berries had to wait till
the first week in June. Albion my autumn fruiting variety was the first to
fruit. Weird !!!
Redcurrants have put on a lot of summer growth so some spur
pruning will be done to let the light into the ripening bunches. The tops of
most shoots have been infected by the leaf blister aphid, but as these will all
get cut back with the summer pruning it will not be a problem.
Tall bearded flag iris are stealing the show for early
summer, but some varieties that fail to impress or have weak stems causing them
to fall over when it rains, will be discarded and new varieties purchased in
autumn.
Iris Dusky Challenger |
Iris Jean Price |
As well as the iris both bush, shrub and climbing roses are
at their best, and it is difficult to decide where our favourite spot is. The
large shrub Ispahan, and the climbers Mme Alfred Carriere, Dublin Bay and
Gertrude Jekyll are all performing to script. They are very reliable and never
let us down.
A small infestation of greenfly and some rose mildew and
rust made an appearance so the sprayer came out to keep the bushes healthy.
A new compost heap was started in January and after turning
it over twice it is now ready for use for mulching fruit trees and bushes and
our courgettes and pumpkins.
If young leeks have
put on enough growth and are now about nine inches tall and a fair thickness
they can be lifted for transplanting to their permanent positions. I take out a
shallow furrow then put deep dibble holes about four to six inches apart along
the row. Lift the young leeks and give them a top and tail and drop them into
the dibbled holes. Water them in and let them get on with it.
END