Another complete change in the weather yesterday - a lovely sunny day and the first time this year that my solar panels have registered over 10 kWh for the day. The solar panels are an interesting indicator of how much light the plants are getting, much better than human eyes, which are designed to enhance dim light and protect the eye from very bright light by opening and shutting the pupil. The solar panels have a range from about 2 kWh on a sunny day in mid winter to about 25 kWh on a sunny day in mid summer - a huge difference. On a very cloudy day in winter they may not come on at all, and however bright moonlight may seem it is not enough to turn the panels on.
Anyway, aware that the rest of this week looks rather wet and very windy, as well as having the distraction of Cheltenham on TV, I wanted to get plenty done yesterday. I had a good look round the plot and removed weed seedlings from under the hedge and around the dug areas of soil. The difference between the carefully weeded areas like the tunnel and the one place that got out of control and some weeds went to seed, where the strawberries were, is huge. I am going to have to put weed matting down along that bit as there are thousands of tiny seedlings.
One job I have been meaning to do for a while is straighten the edge of the grass path between the hedge and the rhubarb and put some lawn edge pieces in to stop the grass invading the bed. I'd been dithering because I didn't have enough edge pieces to reach to the tunnel, but I decided to go half way along anyway as the rhubarb is growing fast and will soon be in the way and make the job much harder. I got it done reasonably easily, although I may still move some of it a bit as I'm not really happy that I have got it right, but the end nearest the rhubarb is fine. I probably need to order more edging to finish the job properly.
The warm February has not helped my winter veg at all. The swedes and kohlrabi were starting to bolt and the big cabbage was splitting. I decided to harvest all the swedes as most have been munched by slugs, and make soup out of anything edible. This clears half of the bed next to the raspberries, where I will be sowing parsnips this year. I took the swedes home and made swede and carrot soup while I was waiting for a parcel to arrive, using up the June sown bucket of carrots from home which were all rather small and going "hairy".
Once the soup was made I went back to the plot and carried on with straightening the grass right up to the tunnel. I dug over the area between the end of the tunnel and the grass and removed some horsetail roots. This area was covered by large geranium plants last year, which I removed, and it makes a reasonable sized bed. For now it houses the pink blueberry bush and I will add the cherry tree (both are in 30 litre pots) when the tunnel top goes back on as it will soon get too tall for the tunnel.
I then decided that I really had better do something with that huge savoy cabbage before it became completely inedible (if it wasn't already). Cabbage is not my favourite veg, its one of those things that is tempting to grow but I never really want to eat. I cut the head off and peeled off the outer leaves, which were full of slugs and brandling worms. Eventually I got to a cleaner part which I took home. To my surprise there was a decent amount of edible cabbage, which will probably keep me going for 3 or 4 days.
Anyway, aware that the rest of this week looks rather wet and very windy, as well as having the distraction of Cheltenham on TV, I wanted to get plenty done yesterday. I had a good look round the plot and removed weed seedlings from under the hedge and around the dug areas of soil. The difference between the carefully weeded areas like the tunnel and the one place that got out of control and some weeds went to seed, where the strawberries were, is huge. I am going to have to put weed matting down along that bit as there are thousands of tiny seedlings.
One job I have been meaning to do for a while is straighten the edge of the grass path between the hedge and the rhubarb and put some lawn edge pieces in to stop the grass invading the bed. I'd been dithering because I didn't have enough edge pieces to reach to the tunnel, but I decided to go half way along anyway as the rhubarb is growing fast and will soon be in the way and make the job much harder. I got it done reasonably easily, although I may still move some of it a bit as I'm not really happy that I have got it right, but the end nearest the rhubarb is fine. I probably need to order more edging to finish the job properly.
The warm February has not helped my winter veg at all. The swedes and kohlrabi were starting to bolt and the big cabbage was splitting. I decided to harvest all the swedes as most have been munched by slugs, and make soup out of anything edible. This clears half of the bed next to the raspberries, where I will be sowing parsnips this year. I took the swedes home and made swede and carrot soup while I was waiting for a parcel to arrive, using up the June sown bucket of carrots from home which were all rather small and going "hairy".
Once the soup was made I went back to the plot and carried on with straightening the grass right up to the tunnel. I dug over the area between the end of the tunnel and the grass and removed some horsetail roots. This area was covered by large geranium plants last year, which I removed, and it makes a reasonable sized bed. For now it houses the pink blueberry bush and I will add the cherry tree (both are in 30 litre pots) when the tunnel top goes back on as it will soon get too tall for the tunnel.
I then decided that I really had better do something with that huge savoy cabbage before it became completely inedible (if it wasn't already). Cabbage is not my favourite veg, its one of those things that is tempting to grow but I never really want to eat. I cut the head off and peeled off the outer leaves, which were full of slugs and brandling worms. Eventually I got to a cleaner part which I took home. To my surprise there was a decent amount of edible cabbage, which will probably keep me going for 3 or 4 days.
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