ENJOY SALADS ALL YEAR ROUND
Apprentice
gardeners in the sixties learn every gardening skill from fruit, flowers and
vegetables to sports, woodlands and landscaping. A five year training session
gave you a good grasp with most of the practical work done at Duntrune Terrace
gardens. The first crops available each year would be radish and lettuce which
had been started early in the glasshouse. These were followed on with spring
onions. The range was only extended with different varieties of radish and
lettuce, some of which could be grown over the winter in beds in the glasshouse.
Today gardening has moved on as holiday travel to exotic locations gave us more
knowledge of other types of salad and experiments began to see which of these
could be grown here.
We now
have a far wider range to be grown outdoors and also in our glasshouses which
can virtually give us fresh salads all year round.
Early season
I start
sowing lettuce, radish, spring onion and beetroot in late March at home in a
warm room, introducing them to a windowsill once they have germinated. They
will go into my unheated greenhouse after a couple of weeks when they are
strong enough. Lettuce gets sown in a shallow seed tray then transplanted into
cellular trays to grow on. The rest all go direct into cellular trays.
I prepare
some ground previously manured and dug in winter. Add some fertiliser, rake it
in then erect low polythene tunnels at least a week before planting to allow
the soil to warm up.
As soon
as the transplants are big enough they can be planted out under the tunnel
allowing just enough space to grow, but remembering you will be harvesting
young plants as soon as they are ready for the plate. Keep checking for slugs
and water as required.
Summer and autumn
This is
the normal season when salads are sown direct into the soil in rows. Only grow
enough to use at each harvesting period, and sow more rows in four week
successions. The last sowings can last well into winter if it is mild. I have
some overwintered lettuce and spring onions that are growing just nicely now
having come through the winter just fine.
However
we are no longer confined to lettuce, radish and spring onions. There is now a
whole lot of other weird and wonderful salads to try out and firstly see if
they will grow, and then are they tasty.
Last year
I tried Pak Choi, and Sorrel outdoors but they never germinated. However Mizuna,
Komatsuna and Tatsoi all grew just fine and lasted well into winter. The salad
leaves were very welcome, but not strongly flavoured. Mustard mix was fine with
a bit more bite. Corn salad and Polycress did not really impress me, but they
are all worth trying again as last year was so cold and wet it never really
gave them a fair trial.
Winter months
A crop of
early carrots under fleece was harvested in summer and the ground lightly
forked over then sown down to a winter blend of salad leaves containing Rocket,
Kale, Mustard and Mizuna. These kept fresh, plentiful and usable from autumn
till January.
Tomato
plants last year were so poor that many were removed in August, The grow bags
were opened up and sown with Mizuna, Mustard and Rocket. Growth was quite good
and gave us small but very worthwhile quantities of salad leaves all winter. I
spread some good fertile topsoil into the growbags and mixed it in before
sowing.
I had
some Oriental salad seed left so an autumn sowing was made in cellular tray
giving me some Tatsoi, Mizuna and Komatsuna plants to overwinter for early
spring planting.
I also
sowed lettuce Arctic King in the autumn, got a good germination so pricked out
forty seedlings into trays to overwinter in my greenhouse. They established
very well, but slowly died out over winter, so I only have six left. Arctic
King may be fine in the arctic, but the Dundee mild winter soon sorted it out,
or maybe it just did not like peat free compost.
Plant of the week
Anemone blanda will form dense drifts of blue
flowers only a few inches tall in late March.
A few
corms planted in a well drained humous rich soil in full sun or partial shade
in the rock garden or woodland fringe will naturalise from spreading of its
seeds to form a carpet. The leaves emerge just after flowering but die down in
summer as soon as some dry weather prevails. Take care when weeding as the
corms are small and not easily seen. Cyclamen hederifolium is a good companion
plant as it usually grows and flowers when the Anemone is dormant.
END