THE GROWING SEASON BEGINS
Our gardening
activities are always dictated by the weather, so although my sowing schedule
indicated it was time to sow tomatoes, sweet peas, broad beans and a few
salads, the winter has kept its grip and so delaying plans. Seeds sown indoors
and germinated on a sunny windowsill in a warm room are fine until they all
need pricking out.
Windowsill space is limited so the hardiest types will go
into my cold greenhouse, but I will put in a fan heater for any cold nights.
Hardening off the spring bedding flowers |
This has been a very
challenging time as winter shows little appetite for going away and letting
spring take over, though the occasional sunny day in mid March has allowed
coffee breaks to be taken outdoors on the patio.
Early
March has been
a hectic time for windowsill gardening as there were so many seeds to sow, but
once the seeds germinated and needed more room after pricking out into larger
cellular trays the problem of space was a real headache. The hardiest of young
plants such as geraniums, broad beans, sweet peas and some young fuchsias had
to go into my cold greenhouse. By mid March it was the turn of young salads
needing more space so spring onions, lettuce Lollo Rossa, cauliflower Clapton
and leek Musselburgh all had to go to the greenhouse. Tomatoes all germinated
well, even though some seed packets were not quite bulging with seeds, (twenty
seeds per packet) but after pricking out into cellular trays they will all need
the warmth of the house on a sunny windowsill for at least another fortnight.
Tomatoes are just too tender for a cold greenhouse in March.
Broad beans germinating |
Seed sowing
continued indoors with Sweet corn Incredible, cabbage Kilaton and Brussels
sprouts Crispus. Once they germinate in about a couple of weeks they will need
to go into the glasshouse, but hopefully by that time we shall see some warmer
weather.
Tomato seedlings pricked out |
The glasshouse is
beginning to get a wee bit crowded as I still have overwintered chrysanthemum
stools for cuttings and my two hanging baskets of winter flowering pansies and
a batch of polyanthus needed some protection. I got one warm day in mid March
so they all went outdoors to be hardened off. Chrysanthemum cuttings are taken
as growth allows.
Drift of crocus |
Outdoors on a
sheltered spot early salad crops of lettuce, radish, spring onion, turnip and
beetroot can be sown to mature after the earlier sowings most of which will get
planted under the protection of a low polythene tunnel in early April.
Carrot fly has
always been a major problem on the allotment plot, so this year I will sow a
row in between four rows of onions to test the theory that the onion smell will
mask the presence of my carrots and the fly may not notice them. Time will
tell. This year I am trying out onion sets rather than growing from seed as
last year I picked a sweet Spanish
variety only to find it did not like our wet
Scottish summer. They all died of a severe dose of white rot.
Cornus Westonbirt |
Tree planting
continued with a plum Victoria to replace last year’s plum bought locally but
was full of disease so never survived to autumn.
Now is the time to cut back the cornus and
willow bushes grown for their coloured stems in the winter garden. I do this
annually, cutting back nearly to ground level. This allows visual access to my
drifts of crocus (which survived the snow blanket), and tulips planted under
these bushes. They share the space happily as they both have different seasons
for growing and flowering.
Wee jobs to do this week
Taking geranium cuttings |
Now is a good time
to take some geranium cuttings from those plants propagated last autumn and now
beginning to put on good growth. They were happy all winter on my sunny
windowsill, where they rooted readily, then got potted up into small pots. They
were getting too big for the windowsill, so after the “Beast from the East”
snow had melted, the plants were transferred to my cold greenhouse. To keep the
plants stocky I remove the growing points, but use these as cuttings to
increase stock numbers. Although winter held its grip for another couple of
weeks, the geraniums seem to be just fine under glass.
END