After a couple of very busy days when the sum total of what I could achieve was a flying visit to harvest a couple of beetroot, I finally had a little time yesterday and by some miracle it wasn't raining.
It had been very windy on Thursday and I wasn't altogether surprised to find 2 of the nets over the raised beds had been dislodged. The cat had already made use of the courgette bed as a toilet. I removed the offending material and replaced the nets, trying to fasten them more securely with clips onto the hoops. I'm not sure these will survive a gale but it is worth trying.
Everywhere was still very soggy with parts of the lowest corner still under water. After 3 days of no attention there were a lot of leaves lying around so I raked up the ones on the grass and picked some up from around the raspberries, trying not to trample the sodden grass too much in the process. The leaves have not yet all come down so there will be more to do soon.
Next job was to tidy up some of the strawberry plants in the tunnel, which had a lot of dead leaves. These still have some green fruit on (as do the ones in the growhouse). I'm not sure whether it is best to cut it off or leave it and see if it ripens at all.
Finally I checked the plants in the growhouse to see if they needed any water (no) and harvested a few small sprigs of calabrese and some carrots for tea. By the time I got home it was once again starting to rain.
The soggy plot is becoming very frustrating as there are 2 jobs I would like to get done that I probably can't for the foreseeable future (I have already abandoned any thoughts of a final grass cut). One is to take my steps down and cut off some of the higher branches of the leyalndii and hawthorn in the west hedge, now that I can see where they are. At the moment (and for the foreseeable future) all this is likely to do is make large holes in the grass as the steps will sink inches into the ground as soon as I stand on them. The other job is to dig up one of the 2 remaining rhubarb plants and plant some of it into a bucket for forcing. I have a feeling that although it is on the higher part of the plot, as soon as I get an inch or so down I will be digging in water. Paddling around trying to dig up large rhubarb roots seems like a recipe for creating an almighty mess (it was hard enough last year when it was dry), and I am reluctant to try. But from both the short and longer range forecasts, it could get worse before it gets better, as currently everything points to a wetter than average end to November. December, January, February and March are all looking wet too, although long range forecasts are thankfully little better than a guess and could therefore be completely wrong.
I do realize that there are people only a few miles south of me who have had their houses flooded in this dreadful weather. Beside that, an inch or so of water on parts of an allotment preventing me from doing a couple of small jobs is completely irrelevant.
It had been very windy on Thursday and I wasn't altogether surprised to find 2 of the nets over the raised beds had been dislodged. The cat had already made use of the courgette bed as a toilet. I removed the offending material and replaced the nets, trying to fasten them more securely with clips onto the hoops. I'm not sure these will survive a gale but it is worth trying.
Everywhere was still very soggy with parts of the lowest corner still under water. After 3 days of no attention there were a lot of leaves lying around so I raked up the ones on the grass and picked some up from around the raspberries, trying not to trample the sodden grass too much in the process. The leaves have not yet all come down so there will be more to do soon.
Next job was to tidy up some of the strawberry plants in the tunnel, which had a lot of dead leaves. These still have some green fruit on (as do the ones in the growhouse). I'm not sure whether it is best to cut it off or leave it and see if it ripens at all.
Finally I checked the plants in the growhouse to see if they needed any water (no) and harvested a few small sprigs of calabrese and some carrots for tea. By the time I got home it was once again starting to rain.
The soggy plot is becoming very frustrating as there are 2 jobs I would like to get done that I probably can't for the foreseeable future (I have already abandoned any thoughts of a final grass cut). One is to take my steps down and cut off some of the higher branches of the leyalndii and hawthorn in the west hedge, now that I can see where they are. At the moment (and for the foreseeable future) all this is likely to do is make large holes in the grass as the steps will sink inches into the ground as soon as I stand on them. The other job is to dig up one of the 2 remaining rhubarb plants and plant some of it into a bucket for forcing. I have a feeling that although it is on the higher part of the plot, as soon as I get an inch or so down I will be digging in water. Paddling around trying to dig up large rhubarb roots seems like a recipe for creating an almighty mess (it was hard enough last year when it was dry), and I am reluctant to try. But from both the short and longer range forecasts, it could get worse before it gets better, as currently everything points to a wetter than average end to November. December, January, February and March are all looking wet too, although long range forecasts are thankfully little better than a guess and could therefore be completely wrong.
I do realize that there are people only a few miles south of me who have had their houses flooded in this dreadful weather. Beside that, an inch or so of water on parts of an allotment preventing me from doing a couple of small jobs is completely irrelevant.
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