| Asparagus (and a few weeds) to the front, artichoke and raspberry (and a lot of weeds) behind, May 2026 |
This weekend my garlic came up somewhat in a rush, because of white rot. I never had this disease until last year: the bulbs start to go moldy and if left in storage will just disintegrate. I won't be able to save any of my own garlic for replanting this year, as it all seems to have it; instead I'm mincing it all up and freezing it, and will buy new bulbs in the autumn for replanting. I'm a bit sad about this: I've been self sufficient in garlic for many years now, but my winning streak is broken. I'll probably plant the new cloves in planters instead of directly in the ground, in the hopes they'll avoid it next year. It looks like my overwintered onions grown in containers are free from the infection, so that gives me a little hope.
The son, daughter and I did some work on the now empty garlic bed, digging out grass and weeds and raking out roots. In fact, we had to stop before the bed was all clear as we completely filled our five composters! Well, they weren't empty to begin with--most were about half full already, but still: a lot of compost material. I was able to spread a few wheelbarrows of wood chips on the edge of the bed, where it meets the next bed (previously mulched and growing peas and beetroot). I'll carry on clearing the bed this week and will just have to make a pile until some of the older stuff compacts down. Luckily this time of year that doesn't take long. I may sow some turnip and beetroot seeds here, or possibly transplant fennel, or even pak choi though that's a risky idea: slugs love love love pak choi, and it would probably survive better in the kitchen garden (except I don't have any room!). It's a rather big bed, so I might even have space to do all of the above.
Of my sad cucumbers, all but one of the pickling types have bit the dust: I think it was slugs. Of the salad types, four--of five--are still growing. I have a lot of little seedlings growing in trays from a very late sowing, but none are quite big enough to transplant. To be honest, four salad cucumber plants is adequate--but I definitely need more pickling cucs. They need to get a move on! It seems like the potting compost may have been the culprit in the early demise of all the other cuc plants.
In other news, we've begun picking strawberries, gooseberries and redcurrants! It seems early? Maybe not. We don't have many strawberry plants (all at home), but there are two bushes each of gooseberries and redcurrants, and all four are completely loaded. I put some wire over the strawberry plants, and also netted my small Morello cherry tree, not quite ripe but close. What's more, I thinned out the apples on my two trees: no more than two fruits per cluster. It hurts, but I did it; I know from past experience that big clusters have little fruits and little clusters have big fruits. I want big fruits.