26 July 2022

Surviving a heat wave

 

A garden with vegetables, shrubs, trees, and lawn with table and chairs
Too hot to enjoy, July 2022
We had record breaking heat this past week, with three days of staying inside as much as possible with all the curtains closed.  Luckily, thanks to my water conservation strategies in the kitchen garden--collecting rainwater, reusing gray water, keeping bare ground covered, and (saving the best for last) building soil--no plants were damaged.  I employ the last two strategies at the allotment and it too suffered no losses;  even the recently transplanted beets are still happily expanding, though I made sure to water them and everything in containers at least daily.  

We also took the decision to bring the chickens back home for the duration, as there is no real shade for them at the allotment, other than a little lean-to in their yard.  At home their yard is under our mature horse chestnut tree, and though they were certainly too hot for comfort, they weren't hot enough to be in danger for their lives.  The ducks have plenty of shade in their large yard and got some fresh water in their muddy pond daily, so they fared better than the hens.

Incidently, transporting the chickens broke our little hen Cookie out of being broody, thankfully.  She was hunkered down in that cramped nest box for a couple weeks and not giving up, despite us taking her eggs every day. 

And after reaching 39.5C by my own thermometer, we thankfully fell back down to the low to mid 20s which is what we are used to for July.  And some rain too (also typical for July).

19 July 2022

Drawbacks and setbacks (in the allotment, July 2022)

In my last post, I ennumerated all the reasons I am happy about the kitchen garden.  Nearly everything has turned out well, and any failures have been slight and easily overcome.

Let's talk about the allotment now.

In the first place, I have had some successes so far this year:  the raspberries have been crazy productive, the peas and broad beans are acceptable, and the garlic was great.  We've had some good beets, artichokes and strawberries.  Some good things going on, yes. 

But I like to keep it real, so here's some of the things which haven't been a success:

Disappearing plants.  All the corn, cucumbers, squashes and zucchinis, about half of the peas and broad beans, and various other transplants just never made it.  I posted about trying soil blocks this year, in the hopes they would transplant better:  nope.  No discernible difference at all.  Pretty much everything in a soil block that went to the allotment simply vanished. 

Grass and weeds (but mainly grass).  I have dug it out--multiple times.  I have sheet mulched it--even more times.  I have put the chicken tractor on it.  It keeps growing back and is constantly on the edge of taking over.  The only place it is not growing is on the paths covered in carpet (and not all paths are thus covered), and in the chicken yard.  And the chicken yard is only de-grassed because the chickens are currently in it--it regrew when they were locked up at home over winter.

Slugs and bugs.  It's bad.  It's really bad.  This is probably the main reason for disappearing plants/food--there are so many slugs.  And part of the reason for the slugs and bugs is the grass--it hides and shelters them from predators (and from me).  If I could clear the grass and weeds, it would reduce the slugs and bugs by a huge amount, which would reduce the amount of disappearing plants.  

In conclusion, allotment:  not that great.  Need a better strategy, particularly for the grass.

12 July 2022

Brassicas in the kitchen garden

Many kohl rabi plants growing in a small space next to fruit trees and a fence
A lot going on here, July 2022

I took a photo of these kohl rabi a month ago, and two months ago when they were planted out.  We've started to eat them!  The biggest ones are bigger than a tennis ball, and even the smallest ones are bulbing up (slowly).  They are purple on the outside and white on the inside and taste like a swede or mild turnip.  Where I've pulled up ones to harvest I've transplanted the last winter Savoy cabbage seedlings I've been growing on in a tray.

A bed of cabbage plants growing next to small fruit trees
Cabbages:  hope they heart up, July 2022

 The cabbages in the bed next to them are all huge and show some small differences in growth pattern (a few are tall and upright, a few are short and wide, most are somewhere between);  a fellow allotmenter gave me the seeds he'd saved so I hope they are only crossed with cabbages, not other types of brassica.  I want them to form big fat heads!  We'll eat them regardless, but probably not till autumn at least.

A garden table with a red pot, placed over rows of small vegetable plants
Protection, July 2022

As mentioned in a previous post, I lost most of my swede seedlings to a pesky pigeon, so I replanted the rows with corn (which was also a replacement crop, the first being lost too);  these were initially covered in insect mesh, but when the corn grew tall enough I took it off and put a different cover over it:  a table with a wire cover and bird netting draped around two sides.  The other two sides have strategic sticks blocking a flight path in, and all of it combined seems to have detered the pigeon, as the remaining swedes have flourished underneath: pictured right at the center of the row.  The corn looks good too, as does the lettuce (hard to see in the photo) I interplanted it with.  

Lastly (not shown), I planted out the Brussels sprouts and purple sprouting broccoli somewhat close together in the rows where the fennel and carrot seeds underperformed;  they are both growing on for the present, to be transplanted out at the allotment late in the summer.  One is covered with bird netting, the other with the insect mesh--to keep the pigeon off them while they grow bigger.  I need them to be big and strong to withstand the slugs at the allotment!

Everything looks pretty good in the kitchen garden;  I'm really pleased with how it's turned out this year.  I'll have to discuss my somewhat underwhelming allotment in the next post.

05 July 2022

Food totals June 2022

 

A grape vine climbing an almond tree with blue sky above
Almonds and grapes together. July 2022

Vegetables
 
7 oz fresh garlic (including scapes)
1.5 oz chives
20.5 oz cabbage greens
17.5 oz salad leaves (chard, mizuna, lettuce, miners lettuce)
15 oz artichoke heads
13 oz beets
16 oz peas
 
Total:  91.5 oz, or 5 lb 11.5 oz 
 
Does not include several bunches of fresh herbs which were too small an amount to weight (less than 0.5 oz)

Fruit
 
No fruit recorded (strawberries, redcurrants, blueberries, sweet cherries, raspberries were all eaten immediately at harvest, but none weighed or counted)

Eggs

93 eggs from 6 adult hens and 2 ducks

A bright orange rose against a dark leafy background
Most of the roses came with the house but I chose this one myself.  July 2022