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Friday 30 March 2012

Molly's Lotment - Potatoes and Things

Ground at mill
 The weather has been glorious in sunny Wales for the last few days but the weather forecasters tell us that all is set to change come the weekend. If it's not quite 'Make hay while the sun shines' time of year it's certainly been busy here on Molly's Lotment. We have been busy preparing the veggie patch down at the mill and planted our main crop of potatoes (all four rows of them). I bought the seed earlier on thinking that they were the early variety only to get home and find that I'd picked up 'Desiree' and 'Pink Kerr' which every gardener knows are  not the early variety at all. However I set them out in a card board box and they chitted well. Also sowed a row of Early Onward peas. I have sown a few boxes as well. Little critters are quite partial to freshly sown peas so a few to fill in the gaps is a good idea.
Pink Kerr and Desiree


It's been 'all systems go' in the poly tunnels too :-


Broad Beans are growing

Autumn King in a flower bucket
Discovered a brilliant tip from Gardeners click - sow carrots in a flower bucket. (I had an old one destined for the recycle centre - rescued it and banged drainage holes in the bottom) The variety I've sown are Autumn King. The great thing about sowing them in a container is that they can be lifted out of the way of the dreaded carrot fly. Looking forward to some nice juicy grub free carrots.


Hispi
The Hispi cabbages are ready for cutting and I've already made vegetable stir fry and coleslaw with a couple of them - 'out of this world mmm.'


Strawberries
My strawberry plants in the top poly tunnel are just starting to come into flower. They were a complete mess a few weeks ago. The runners had run everywhere and I had to thin them with a vengeance. The plants that came up with my cultivator have been planted outside. They're doing okay as well, but will fruit a week or two later than the ones inside.


Asparagus
And finally .... the icing on the cake - I bought two asparagus plants past their sell by from the garden centre a couple of years ago. They were throwing them out for the princely sum of ten pence. Not having grown asparagus before, I read on the packet that they needed to be planted on ridges of compost rich soil. I hit on the idea of planting them in an old potato planter which I filled with garden compost and then a layer of soil on the top. Two healthy little shoots poking through. You can't ask any more than that for ten pence can you?


Happy Gardening
Molly



Wednesday 21 March 2012

Molly's Lotment - Wild flowers and More Weeding

Been busy again weeding the flower beds. The weather has been cloudy and overcast for most of the day. No complaints - perfect for doing those weeding jobs - not too cold and not too hot. We have did have an ancient plum tree growing in the middle of the top border.  Well actually, it was there long before I was and I formed the bed around it. It has not borne any fruit for as long as I can remember and the centre of the trunk was filled with powdery compost. Decision time - the 'man that can' came along with his chainsaw and I spent the morning clearing away thorny branches on to the trailer.


We took them down to the mill field to be shredded at a later date and I took time to look for the wild flowers growing there


Wild Strawberries


and primroses on the bank
Colt's foot




Trees in bud
I love this time of the year.


Back to work! 
Finished weeding and mulched the top soil with compost from the heap.
Top Border


Also planted out a box of foxgloves, grown last year from seed.


I try to grow most of my plants from seed  or divide the plants up where I can. Great to plant swap with friends and family.


Some of my plants


Two down and two to go!



Sunday 11 March 2012

Molly's Lotment - Digging the Weeds

Morning Mist
Brilliant day today. Really feels like Spring is 'Sprung'. The low mist at the foot of the hill just before the sun rose was something else.  A great day to start on the weeding. Weeds never fail to grow in abundance even if nothing else will. It's so easy to over do things and end up with a bad back for the rest of the week so gently does it (note to self.)

Bergenia along side the path
The Bergenia by the side of the path has really come into it's own this year. I chopped off several pieces  last year and planted them in one of the beds at the top of the garden. Even so the clump that was left, has spread with abundance all along the side of the wall, a forest of dark green, elephant ear leaves and a maze of pink flowers.
Seed Heads of Last Year's Sedum
Seed heads from last year's Sedum are still holding out. The relay of Winter handing the baton over to Spring and yet I feel  I want them to hold on just a bit longer. The rich copper colour is so pretty.










Weeds

Couch grass, creeping buttercup and dandelion roots have run amok amongst my day lillies and aquilegia.  A job pending tomorrow if the weather's dry and sunny. The one thing I really like about weeding is that you can see where you've been and I love little encouragement monuments.






But today, I've cleared and planted one little piece of ground by the stream.  I sowed foxgloves, lupins and delphiniums in trays last July and planted them out today.  I buried hostas underneath the apple tree and planted pulmonaria, stachys and sweet william. It looks so bare at this moment in time, but I'm so looking forward to watching them grow.

One down and three to go.

Monday 5 March 2012

Molly's Lotment - Sowing and Growing

Flowering Cherry
Last week's glorious weather lulled us all into a false sense of security. And then come Sunday we had howling winds, cold grey down pours and even a dusting of snow on the surrounding hills. Every day, in spite of the change in the weather, the flowering cherry trees on the edge of the lawn seem to get that much 'pinker'. I wish I had a  video recorder on stand by to record the blooms as they unfurl and then play it back speeded up. It's only when you take a photo and then a few days later, another, that you notice how much things have moved on. The miraculous silence of  growth.


Today I really intended to weed my flower beds and borders. The sun has been shining for most of the day, but a biting wind persuaded me to take cover and potter about in the poly tunnel. First of all, a little trip round to see how things are coming along.


'Hispi' Cabbages
The cabbage seeds sown last October and planted out in January are starting to fill up quite well. I hoed between them with my favourite hoe. It's an ancient onion hoe really with a narrow semi circled blade. I bought it from a car boot a few years ago for no more than fifty pence, but it's so good for doing all sorts of hoeing jobs. I'm hoping the cabbage will be ready to start cutting in April, especially with the price of vegetables ever rising.






'All Year Round' Cauli
As well as sowing cabbage, I sowed a tray of 'All Year Round' cauliflowers the same time.
I planted them the opposite end of the tunnel but the slugs played havoc with them. I tried circling them with rings of sawdust. It did have a measure of success but I'm afraid I had to include a few blue mini pellets as well.
Tiny curds of cauliflower are just starting to form so hoping they will make it to full growth. Think I may have to give them a dressing of blood, fish and bonemeal to boost them up a bit.






'Bunyard's Exhibition' Broad Beans
Here are some broad beans, I sowed in a couple of seed trays. Other Half thinks that they are well ready to be planted out. I'm hanging back a bit. Last year I planted two lovely rows along the edge of the poly out of the seed trays. So proud of my work, only to find that our four legged little friends had, had what might be described as a 'bean feast' during the night - bitten into and eaten all the bean seeds away and left a trail of lifeless shoots on the top of the soil. Who is Head Gardener in your house?






Parsley
Do you ever buy those pots of herbs, they sell in the supermarket? I bought a little pot of parsley some time ago. Instead of having, one little plant as you might expect, there were actually a clump of them and I separated them out and planted a row in the top tunnel. They have worked out cheaper than buying a packet of seeds and are at this moment still going strong. 


For the remainder of the afternoon, I've been indulging in a bit of seed sowing. The 'Ailsa Craig' tomatoes, I sowed in a margarine tub on February 8th have, as yet  just one head above the parapet. The seed was last year's so I don't know if any more will grow or not. Hedging my bets, I've sown another tub of 'Alicante' today. The Brussel sprouts sown in February have germinated, but I sowed another small batch again today as well. The first pinch of lettuce sown in January have survived and made it into a square in the poly tunnel. The second batch have also germinated. I've found out the hard way that it's a lot wiser not to sow the whole packet in one go.


Happy Monday
Molly 









Thursday 1 March 2012

Molly's Lotment - Growing Our Own Vegetables

 This is such an exciting day for me, my first blog entry on Gardening Journal International - Wales and what a good day to start - March 1st - St David's Day. My love of plants and gardening started as a child. My grandfather lived with us on our small farm. I loved being in the garden with him. He grew most of our vegetables and the most wonderful spray chrysanthemums. I can still feel the icy dew on their leaves and the wonderful heady  scent that garden chrysanths have. I have lived in Mid Wales for most of my sixty eight years and in the same house for the last thirty five. We live in an old farm house and have a couple of acres of land incorporating the ruins of an old corn mill. The land was covered in scrub and brambles when we moved in and oh so stony. Bit by bit over the years we cleared and reseeded the main of it. During the 1980's I used to run a  Saturday market stall, just over the Welsh/English border, in Shrewsbury, selling our home grown vegetables. At the time we invested in three poly tunnels which although a bit battered  (like their owner), are still going strong. Old age, as they say, doesn't come on its own and now we only grow enough to keep our family fed and the few surplus to give away. My first photos are from my album. The ones that follow will be (fingers crossed) the ones I take as my gardening year 2012 unfolds.

A view of the hills

Land across from the old corn mill

Banks

Trees

Streams

And thistles



Liz's Log - St David's Day



Hello Gardeners' of Wales, I'm Liz



A Very Happy St David's Day






This blog is a branch (excuse the pun), of Gardening Journal International (GJI).  The other branches are growing every month, so just keep an eye on the top of your screen for any new  countries joining our family.


You can find lots of information about this blog, and writing a journal at GJI, in the 'Help and Information' pages on the top right of your screen. 


From an English country garden 


I am an English gardener trying to find my feet in Wales again.  I love to visit this beautiful country as often as I can, and have relatives there, but I am from the Midlands (Nottinghamshire), so I have a lot to learn about gardening in Wales.  I am relying on you to show me what you all get up to in your gardens/plots/allotments.

One more thing! 
If you are Welsh speaking, then please find the 'Translate Tool' on the top right of the screen, and look for Welsh on the bottom of the drop down list.




Credits

The background photo for this blog was taken by Birgitte Handricks.
The photo was taken on Conway Mountain, looking over Conway Bay, Wales, UK.
You can find more on Birgitte by clicking onto the Contributors section, at the top of the screen, or the link below:




Happy gardening

Liz



Helo Gardeners 'Cymru, rwy'n Liz


Mae Hapus Iawn Dydd Gŵyl Dewi






Mae'r blog yn gangen (esgusodwch y gair mwys), o Garddio International Journal (GJI).  Mae'r canghennau eraill yn cael eu tyfu bob mis, felly dim ond cadwch lygad ar frig eich sgrîn ar gyfer unrhyw gwlad newydd ymuno â'n teulu.

Gallwch ddod o hyd i lawer o wybodaeth am y blog yma, ac ysgrifennu yn y cylchgrawn GJI, yn 'Cymorth a Gwybodaeth' y tudalennau ar y dde uchaf eich sgrin. 

O gardd gwlad Saesneg 

Yr wyf yn arddwr Saesneg yn ceisio dod o hyd i fy nhraed yng Nghymru unwaith eto.  Rwyf wrth fy modd i ymweld â'r wlad brydferth mor aml ag y gallaf, ac mae ganddynt berthnasau yno, ond yr wyf o Ganolbarth Lloegr (Swydd Nottingham), felly mae gen i lawer i'w ddysgu am arddio yng Nghymru.  Yr wyf yn dibynnu arnoch chi i ddangos i mi yr hyn yr ydych i gyd yn ei wneud yn eich gerddi / plotiau / rhandiroedd.

Un peth arall! 
Os ydych yn siarad Cymraeg, mae croeso i ddod o hyd i'r 'Erfyn Translate' ar y dde uchaf y sgrin, ac edrych am y Gymraeg ar waelod y rhestr gwympo.

Credydau

Mae'r llun cefndir ar gyfer y blog hwn ei wneud gan Birgitte Handricks.
Roedd y tynnwyd y llun ar Conway Mountain, yn edrych dros Fae Conwy, Cymru, DU.
Gallwch ddod o hyd i fwy o wybodaeth ar Birgitte drwy glicio ar yr adran Cyfranwyr, ar frig y sgrin, neu y ddolen isod:



Garddio Hapus

Liz