IN AND OUT OF SUMMER
Recent
summer weather has really made a huge impact on the garden. However it never
seems to last more than a few days then it is back to cool days with showers,
though compared to last year the sunny days are very welcome. The garden is
trying very hard to catch up on the late season, but we are still running at
least three weeks late. I picked my first strawberry on 16th June
this year whereas last year in a very poor summer, (apart from a sunny hot
March) the first one was picked on 25th May. If the dry weather with
a few warm days here and there continues this years strawberries will be
terrific. The plants are weighed down with a very heavy potential crop, trying
to make up for last years disaster when continual wet weather rotted all the
fruit before it was ripe enough to pick. The blackbirds have already spotted
the first bit of colour and tested them to see if they were ready, so nets are
now in place and slug pellets are absolutely necessary as there are still
numerous slugs and snails left over from last years plague.
Saskatoon
berries are beginning to swell so I will get ready to put my nets over them at
the end of June before they start to show colour.
Bramble
Helen is in full bloom, very showy with large pristine white flowers, and
raspberries Glen Fyne and what I think is Glen Rosa, all showing a lot of
flower clusters. I do not know Glen Rosa so I wait to see how it fruits. It can
certainly grow as it produces an abundance of canes which need thinning out
both along the row and many feet beyond the row as it suckers very freely.
The fig
Brown Turkey is full of young swelling figs. If they all ripen I will get well
over fifty this year, but leaves which are needed to support the developing
fruit are very slow to grow.
Apples and
plum fruits are very prolific and now swelling just nice. No sign of scab or
mildew as I now only grow strong healthy varieties. Bramley usually gets a few
young shoots totally covered in mildew from infected buds overwintering, but I
remove these primary infections as they appear in June and this stops the
disease from spreading. Plums can get a serious attack of mealy aphid which can
defoliate the tree and then the fruit cannot develop, so I will keep a watch to
see if they appear.
Garden flowers in summer
Climbing
rose Gertrude Jekyll was the first rose to flower this year but now all my
climbers and shrub roses are in flower and the bush roses not too far behind..
The
weather really suited the azaleas and rhododendrons which put on a fantastic
display, but now it is the turn for the ceanothus, cistus, philadelphus and
viburnums.
The
herbaceous border is ablaze of colour with dazzling red oriental poppies mixed
with flag iris and peonies. Then the delphiniums and tall scented lilies will
have their day in a couple of weeks time.
I had
some spare Cosmos, petunias, lobelia and Livingston daisies, but there is
always a bare patch somewhere needing brightening up so they got planted in my
winter garden. The kerria, cornus and willow bushes had all been pruned right
down to ground level to encourage regrowth of young shoots which will colour up
again for the next dormant season. Spring flowering bulbs planted in between
these bushes are all finished and the foliage has died down and been removed,
but as the stooled shrubs are still only about six to ten inches tall there is
scope for a summer splash of colour before the shrubs need more room to grow.
To keep
my strength up for all this work Anna has been busy in the kitchen starting the
first batch of summer soups made with the last of the leeks, kale, broad
beans,(after removing skins),and Swiss chard (all from the freezer), plus onions,
garlic, celery, dried herbs and chicken stock.
I hope to
follow this with some fresh strawberries for dessert picked from the allotment
only when they are fully ripe, and all the more enjoyable when you can have
lunch outside on a sunny patio.
Plant of the week
Californian poppies have become naturalised in a
small bed underneath my climbing rose Dublin Bay. It shares this space with
crocus which flower in early spring then die down allowing the poppy to take
over. It seeds very easily and always grows quickly covering itself in bright
deep golden and orange flowers all summer. It can spread by seeding to other
bare patches and just loves dry, stony poor soil in full sun.
Painting of the month
Alyth Bridge from the rose bed is a
watercolour painting from my Alyth village series showing the old 17th
century pack horse bridge over Alyth Burn in summer. Other paintings in the
series show the old bridge in winter plus views over the town from the top of
Alyth Hill.
END