Wednesday 19 June 2019

Ragged Robin


Sometimes you just miss the boat with sowing seeds and so it was with Ragged Robin (Lychnis flos-cuculi) this year.  But much to my delight there is a whole patch of it which has just burst into flower nearby.  It is thriving in the damp conditions alongside our local pond.   I reckon I would be hard pressed to provide this habitat in our back garden just with its half barrel pond!


Drove of Ragged Robin  - or should that be a drift?




Friday 14 June 2019

Surprise Royal Visit


The hungry gap is coming to an end.  Soon there will be new potatoes, peas, lettuces and broad beans to add to the rhubarb already harvesting.  One crop that has taken me by surprise and jumped ahead of the rest seemingly out of nowhere is the flashy globe artichoke.  How could I have forgotten how early this crops?  I am following advice and removing the first heads to encourage the rest to grow to edible size.  Its proper name is Cynara scolymus and it is an edible thistle, but only edible if you pick it before it flowers.  Even then, only a very small portion of the flower bud  is edible and it is not easy to extract from the top of the stem, behind the immature flower. Additional  scrapings can be garnered from the base of each ‘petal’ (or more correctly  bract).  So little of the plant is edible that you wonder how this vegetable found advocates willing to grow it when food was scarce. But it did find advocates, wealthy and influential ones.  If any vegetable is to be called the vegetable of monarchs then this is it.  Exotic, ostentatious, expensive, status affirming. Henry VIII reputedly loved them (As did French,  Spanish and Italian aristocracy way back to the not so royal Theophrastus, Aristotle’s pupil)  When Henry’s sister Mary, Queen of France, got married in 1515 the commemorative picture showed her holding a globe artichoke. As with all scarce exotic fruit and vegetables it was said to be an aphrodisiac.    




Sunday 2 June 2019

Plot Update

Potatoes - Earlies and Maincrop

Salads - Some slug damage

Brassicas - Not pretty but effective


Peas and broad beans

Garlic & Onions


Potatoes after mounding


Runner beans - It starts here

Carrot protection in place.





Saturday 1 June 2019

Meet the Gang






Here's the motley crew that are just waiting to be set out in the greenhouse.  They are in the green room (shed) while the greenhouse is set up for the summer season:


Much less cluttered now that the seedlings have been evicted:


We have had so much rain in the last week that watering has not been an issue even for new sowings and plantings at the allotment (of which more to follow).  It is warm enough for even tender plants to survive outdoors so I have been moving everything along apace.