Most of this week has been dull and cold enough to make gardening rather unpleasant (at least when you are expecting summer!). I did manage to get a bit of weeding done and deadheaded the pulmonaria which was looking messy. Also removed the corn salad which was flowering and showing signs of mildew.
Apart from that I spent a bit of time planning the next moves as there are always unexpected things. One of these is the fuchsia berry plants which are rather bigger than I anticipated. For some reason I had got it into my head that they were about 18 inches high, but in fact they appear to grow to about 3ft with 18 inches being the spread... My idea of planting 3 in a 30 litre pot may not work as well as I thought. However, as the plants are currently about 4 inches high and growing very slowly, something is going to have to change dramatically if they are going to make 3ft this year. My inclination is to risk planting the 3 in a bucket, the objective being to see if I actually like the taste before allowing them to take over the garden!
Today was a bit warmer and much less windy so I put the begonias and some of the osteospermums into their pots on the fence. I also took the french beans that started life on the windowsill out of the growhouse and hung them on the back fence above the potatoes as they are rather long to go anywhere else. They are starting to produce new flowers. The 2 largest Sungold tomatoes were planted out in one of the plastic growhouses, which meant removing the shelf housing the flowers. The tray they are on has taken up temporary residence on top of an empty pot which is waiting for a courgette to grow large enough to put in it.
The courgette that was going to go in the empty pot has been planted in the cold frame instead. That meant moving the salad planter containing the spinach out of the cold frame and onto the path near the wormery, replacing the corn salad. The spinach has done really well and is still producing loads of leaves although they are getting smaller and the stalks are more stringy than they were. In contrast the red veined spinach that I planted in the other salad planter (now next to the one I just moved) is not very happy. These salad planters come with a plastic cover which is useful for covering small seedlings, but I think what has happened here is that when we had the sunny weather a week or 2 ago I left the top on (with the ventilation hole open) and the plants have got too hot. Spinach hates being hot and it shows.
Finally I moved the pot of runner beans out of the growhouse into its final position between the cold frame and the archway. I rigged up a support of canes and a string running over the cold frame so that the beans will climb along it and be easy to pick. I've been struggling to find room for the beans this year and didn't think it mattered as I can take them or leave them, but my Mum likes them and yesterday she told me she was not growing any herself this year. 3 plants are not going to be enough, so I hurriedly planted a few more seeds in the propagator, which hopefully will be ok growing in pots up the back of the archway like they did last year.
Things are taking shape, and I have been able to turn off one of the 2 grow light gardens now that most of the tomatoes have gone outside. There are just a few later sown ones which were replacements for failures to germinate, plus a couple of Shirley armpits and 2 melon plants under the taller grow lights upstairs now. The downstairs grow light garden (cooler) is still packed with peas, beans, broccoli and courgettes though.
Apart from that I spent a bit of time planning the next moves as there are always unexpected things. One of these is the fuchsia berry plants which are rather bigger than I anticipated. For some reason I had got it into my head that they were about 18 inches high, but in fact they appear to grow to about 3ft with 18 inches being the spread... My idea of planting 3 in a 30 litre pot may not work as well as I thought. However, as the plants are currently about 4 inches high and growing very slowly, something is going to have to change dramatically if they are going to make 3ft this year. My inclination is to risk planting the 3 in a bucket, the objective being to see if I actually like the taste before allowing them to take over the garden!
Today was a bit warmer and much less windy so I put the begonias and some of the osteospermums into their pots on the fence. I also took the french beans that started life on the windowsill out of the growhouse and hung them on the back fence above the potatoes as they are rather long to go anywhere else. They are starting to produce new flowers. The 2 largest Sungold tomatoes were planted out in one of the plastic growhouses, which meant removing the shelf housing the flowers. The tray they are on has taken up temporary residence on top of an empty pot which is waiting for a courgette to grow large enough to put in it.
The courgette that was going to go in the empty pot has been planted in the cold frame instead. That meant moving the salad planter containing the spinach out of the cold frame and onto the path near the wormery, replacing the corn salad. The spinach has done really well and is still producing loads of leaves although they are getting smaller and the stalks are more stringy than they were. In contrast the red veined spinach that I planted in the other salad planter (now next to the one I just moved) is not very happy. These salad planters come with a plastic cover which is useful for covering small seedlings, but I think what has happened here is that when we had the sunny weather a week or 2 ago I left the top on (with the ventilation hole open) and the plants have got too hot. Spinach hates being hot and it shows.
Finally I moved the pot of runner beans out of the growhouse into its final position between the cold frame and the archway. I rigged up a support of canes and a string running over the cold frame so that the beans will climb along it and be easy to pick. I've been struggling to find room for the beans this year and didn't think it mattered as I can take them or leave them, but my Mum likes them and yesterday she told me she was not growing any herself this year. 3 plants are not going to be enough, so I hurriedly planted a few more seeds in the propagator, which hopefully will be ok growing in pots up the back of the archway like they did last year.
Things are taking shape, and I have been able to turn off one of the 2 grow light gardens now that most of the tomatoes have gone outside. There are just a few later sown ones which were replacements for failures to germinate, plus a couple of Shirley armpits and 2 melon plants under the taller grow lights upstairs now. The downstairs grow light garden (cooler) is still packed with peas, beans, broccoli and courgettes though.
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