Wednesday, September 28, 2022

 Early start today. A sunny morning, the wind has dropped and I'm rewarded with a squirrel and young blackbirds ambling up the lane in front of me. The ground is damp from all the rain yesterday and maybe the cold start this morning. I'm hoping to plant a couple of spring violas (already flowering) and a self-seeded honeysuckle beside the wooden fence. 

Emptied the compost, picked up the apples (not as many now, more staying on the branch) then got the seat and coffee and sat under the apple tree. A tiny parasol mushroom peeping out of the grass (Pleated Inkcap (Parasola plicatilis) so looked for more - only one other, next to the boarder of the ericaceous bed.

       


Cut some leylandii to mulch this bed. Will do more next time.
Used the spring tyne rake to clear some thatch, to add brown to the compost. 
Some deadheading, yellow roses still looking good and the other bush may produce more buds. Meanwhile it adds autumnal colours to the plot with leaves touched with red, while yellow comes from several flowers. In the distance (just outside the allotments area), the tall trees are yellow-leaved.
After planting the flowers, the local robin having followed me, dodged back to find a meal in the upturned soil.


Wasp nest still active, not so many bees around and those small. One honey bee and a single red admiral, lots of white butterflies, but then there are lots of brassicas on the nearby plots. 
The old wheelbarrow is in the proto-pond and has some water in it.
As I sat enjoying my second coffee, the eye spots jobs for next time. Move a red currant from under the apple tree to this fruit bed by the shed.


It is mostly raspberries (summer and autumn), then strawberries but also a red currant bush.
Get some 6X (which is concentrated manure) and bags of compost so beds can be prepared for winter. Perhaps some will grow green manure or have autumn planted broad beans, who knows.
And the hedge really needs trimming and the tops reducing.
All we need is the weather.



  

 

Thursday, September 22, 2022

Turn, turn?

 They said it would rain. 

Well, the sun came out and with it all the insects. Ladybirds in the grasses, daddy longlegs dancing ballerina-like across the dew spattered growth and my familiar common grasshopper.

Bees of course, wasps from the nest and an unusual yellow and black flyer which I will have to look up in the book.

Windfalls, but not as many as last week. Strawberry runners digging in, weeding as I walk around. 

The straw needs to be spread out and topped with compost, as I suspect there are/is mouse in the shed.

Buzzard flying low, robins and black birds trilling, magpies squarking.

A hint of autumn, perhaps?

Thursday, September 15, 2022

What?

There are still a few unidentified plants growing around the plot. This is one of them.


I did wonder if it was a beech, but having looked at the Woodland Trust identifier (excellent resource) I think it might be a lime (small leaved lime?). Of course there are several types of lime so now I need to check the back of the leaf for hairy-ness!
This one is growing in front of the low eating apple but I have noticed another growing in J's patch.

Cut them back? Pull them out? 

First work out definitely what it is, how big it will grow then make a decision - yes? 

Err.... could be birch? (I'm not very good at this!)

 

Wednesday, September 14, 2022

13th Cooler...

It has been longer than usual since my last visit to the plot, having been called to do my civil duty. The weather had slipped from summer, bringing cool overnight winds. 

So many apples around the trees, some brown and mould-mottled, some with nibbled holes from slugs and woodlice. But most useful for juice and puree. The red eaters are dropping and there weren't many to start with so I also picked a couple from the tree. The low eaters are ready and can be eaten from the tree.

The plums have finished, just a few left for the wasps and butterflies. Red admirals and cabbage whites mostly. A sad painted lady caught in a hedge spider's web.

There is a nest under the hedge by the cold frame. Probably wasps but maybe a rogue swarm of bees - they were flying in and out so rapidly it was hard to tell.
The sweetcorn cobs are starting to fatten up. Cranberries are almost ripe and blueberries are still coming a 
few at a time. The horseradish leaves are dying back - it may be ready to harvest, must check the books. 
No beetles on the asparagus, pulled out the invading brambles. Tidied behind the bed so as to plant the foxglove plants and found yet another bin lid! I don't if previous owners used them to collect water or if this is the natural resting place for lids that have blown in from elsewhere.
 Pulled some rhubarb, picked some soft fruit and put them in a bag with good apples and a few runner beans for A.
Robins declaring their territories, magpies flying low, shedding baby feathers. 
Hedge needs trimming, grass probably needs strimming, fruit trees need pruning, beds need topping up.
Plans for next season?
Meanwhile, cakes made from apple puree and plums. Note to self - if using gf flour, add more liquid.


 



Yep, it's slipped away....

 Too many plans, ideas, ambitions but too little time.  The decision has been made.  Relief. But then the mild panic because what to take? W...