The tomato plants are starting to sprout tomatoes! As they were so small I found it quite hard to get any decent pics. We spotted the first one on saturday and today I found three more. I think this means that I have to start feeding. We bought some tomato feed although I am not sure if it is organic. In fact, when it comes to organic gardening, I'm not sure what to do with regard to plant food. Am I allowed to get the off the shelf stuff? What is organic plant food - surely feeding plants is automatic cheating, whereas organic gardening should be a "marathon not a sprint" approach. Ah who cares, this year I'm learning and I am allowed to get it wrong. All of the tomato plants are in pots which means they are prone to drying out. However advice is not to over water, which complicates things. I watered the plants yesterday evening but today we had really heavy downpours. So should I leave them a day or so to recover; although it is really warm (mid - 20s today) so the moisture has probably evaporated. Mmm I'll have a look tomorrow evening and see how they are looking.
Sunday, July 15, 2007
Friday, July 13, 2007
Progress
It's great to see how far we have come. I took a picture of the veggie patches the other day to do just that. You can see how tall the runner beans are, how the sweet peas and dwarf french beans are filling out, just generally how everything is growing away. And that is despite the poor weather. I wonder how it would all look if we had a blazing hot summer. Okay we still have August to come, so fingers crossed for some uninterrupted sunshine.
Lemon grass
I've just been flicking back to the earlier posts and saw a picture of the lemon grass when they were little seedlings. Not much has made it outside (mainly because I sowed far too many seeds). There are three pots outside now. One got attached by slugs/snails but seems to be recovering. Another is doing okay although I'm not sure what stage it should be at. It has one tall blade and since feeding it the other day, more seem to be developing (the picture is pre - feed). I've been looking around on the internet and have found out that the seeds are supposed to be hard to germinate. Mine were fine - I'm sure 99% of them germinated. Although next time I wont sow so many so close together as it is very difficult to separate them later on. (Ok, I really should have thinned them out). However there is no indication of when they will turn into the large plants I have seen picture of, nor of when I can start harvesting for Thai Green Curry. I think this will be a much longer project than the vegetable.
Sweet peppers
Since putting the sweet peppers outside they haven't really done very well. I think I put them out too early as the weather really wasn't good enough. We've had a dreadful June - so much rain and I've been wearing my scarf to work. The plants have also been attacked by slugs and greenfly so it's all a bit of a battle. However as it starts to warm up I'm hoping that the things will recover and start yielding. A couple of them are doing okay and I have moved them to a better position in the garden - it's a bit more sheltered and it gets more sun. I've also put some of the tomato plants there which are already flowering. I've given them all a bit of general plant food so hopefully that'll kick start things into action. The one in the pic is one that I put outside a bit later than the others - only last weekend has it felt the cold outside air on its leaves. It looks so much more greener and lusher than the others.
Bees
We have bees! They are visiting the runner beans so hopefully the fears of a "bee shortage" are over exaggerated. The flowers on the runner beans are dying and starting to produce little mini - runners. They are curved and fluffy now, so it will be interesting to see them develop into full grown beans ready for eating.
Tuesday, July 10, 2007
Monster slugs
Monster monster monster slugs in the garden. I decided to clear up the border underneath the oak tree. It had been covered in leaves since we moved in last October - the leaves hadn't even begun to decompose as they are tough dry little things. As I got raking, I noticed these enormous slimy beasts. They were FAT - about the size of a clench fist (of a small child). Then one started to move (I had removed its home after all) and it looked like a small legless tiger. It must have been about 5 inches long. These things have been eating our veg.
Wednesday, July 4, 2007
What weather
The weather has been absolutely awful here at the moment. Cold cold cold and rain rain rain! I'd forgotten it was June. Last night we had some spectacular storms - beautiful fork lightning across the greyish yellow sky and deep rumbles of thunder. I was home alone so a bit scared, although nothing to worry about in the end as I was not hit by lightning as I made my dinner.
Anyway I tell you this because the weather means less sunshine for the crops. I'm not sure whether or not the sweet peppers or chillies will make it through to harvest. I've also bought some tomato plants and I am worried about them too. I've put them under a make-shift fleece covering, so hopefully that'll help, but we will have to see.
The salad crops seem to be doing well although the slugs do like a nibble. I have resorted to buying so-called "organic" slug pellets to kill the buggers, but I feel like I have lost my green credentials as a result.
Most of the spinach and all of the pakchoi have now been pulled up. The pakchoi had run its course and the spinach had gone to seed (started to flower) so time to make room for new crops. Mr is in charge of these and he plans to sow some more pakchoi, possibly leeks... Mmmm leeks are good for risotto, pasta dishes, fish..!
The runner beans have begun to flower. They are bright red - you can see them from the kitchen through the tree!
However the shortage of bees (the flying buzzing things) may mean that they don't get pollinated. I have seen a few flying around so hopefully it'll be fine.
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