Monday, 27 June 2011

First Harvest


After months of taking stuff to the allotment, it's good to be bringing something home!

So, I have 'Maris Bard' early potatoes, 'Aquadulce' broad beans, and a mixture of rather beautiful but large radishes. Fortunately I like them hot!

Last week I dug up some of the 'Premiere' potatoes. Sadly these first earlies have not done too well: a combination of drought in spring and rain in June. No plants grew anywhere near as large as they should have done, and several have gone yellow. With black stems and a mushy seed potato, this could be black-leg. I ate some of those potatoes above this evening, tasty but fell apart in less that 10 minutes boiling, as the 'Premiere' did last week. I'm not sure whether this is due to the problems described above or a characteristic of these cultivars. I'll try steaming next time. It's also obvious that the potatoes in the section which I had dug over have done better. So if I do go over to no-dig, I'll prepare the ground, by digging, first.

The 'Aquadulce' broad beans are big but a little floury, the 'Stereo' are smaller but sweeter. It's good to be growing them, it's been some years since I had space to grow broad beans. The French beans are going well, had to make bigger netting over them. It seems a bit of a shame to have to use netting so much, but I hope that an approach with more ground cover in future will take its place to some extent. That will have to wait till all is a bit less weedy.

After digging out the potatoes I planted a 'Lady Godiva' squash at one end of the plot, 'Nero di Milan' at the other. Both from Nottingham Organic Gardeners' Plant-swap. I planted two innominate courgettes and two 'Di Nizza' round courgettes under cardboard over some garden waste in the lower part of the allotment, a bit of an experiment.

In the onion plot I planted out lots of module-sown calendula, and on the brassica plot I planted african marigolds. Not as companion plants per se, but to attract hoverflies and other useful insects.

Now I am eating yoghurt with strawberries from my little plot at home!

No comments: