I thought I'd be planting out my Chinese cabbages* in the kitchen garden and sheet mulching over the failed beetroot bed; I changed my mind and instead transplanted the cabbages into that bed at the allotment. The son helped me re-weed the bed (recall it was matted with couch grass roots after I pulled the new potatoes), digging out grass once again and pulling some small weeds. It looks like only about a dozen beets actually sprouted--probably old seed after all.
I managed to get a tray of pak choi in the kitchen garden along with six extra Chinese cabbages. That bed held my very first early leeks which I pulled, washed and put into the fridge last week, and the long green leaves got chopped and frozen for later stews and stir fries. I let my two ducks have several days of free range in the kitchen garden ("We're Going On a Slug Hunt"); and after planting out my tender little plants, not only did I net them (sorry lettuce, but you are now big and pak choi is small) but I very liberally covered the ground with crushed eggshells. Here's hoping the slugs are a) not willing to cross, or b) not there at all.
It's about time to empty the pots of cherry tomatoes at the top of my allotment--I may move them back to the bottom (close to the water supply) over winter and replant with onions, now sprouting up in a pot at home. I've tried growing onions over winter once before, without success--actually onions in generally have never been a winner for me, winter or summer. Still, I want to be self reliant in all vegetables we eat and onions are a staple: I'm not giving up just yet.
Unlike my onions, leeks have always been a reliable crop for winter and spring harvest for me; this is the first year I've grown an early variety (Lyon) in addition to my usual late one (Musselbrugh); I started picking them last month. I expect the earlies to last until winter before I move onto the lates. I've been using them as an onion substitute with tasty results: the long white stalks are very similar to onions in taste and the green leaves are mild like spring onion tops, though a different texture. The only downside (and really only a slight one in my opinion): they aren't as easy to clean as an onion, with sand and compost trapped in between the outer layers.
*First it was going to be cauliflowers, then Chinese cabbage--now I'm aiming for spring cabbage! Something will go there, I promise.
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