Up until last Friday I hadn't had chance to get into the School veg plot since the kids had broke up. The caretaker had let me know that the council gardeners were coming to cut the grass and trim the trees and bushes, so I'd be able to get access to the veg patch to see what needed doing.
A couple of the pupils are doing that Lifestyle thing and are getting together tins of food and the like to give to the pensioners in the villages sheltered accomodation and so this was a chance to see what, if anything, was available for them to use
So it was with some trepidation that the Reetlets and I trundle along to the school on Friday and this was what I found:
Nettles were taking over the rows of carrots - sorted them out;
The parsnip foliage is impressively green and bushy but then so were the weeds - sorted them out too;
The potatoes are doing well (and had smothered most of the weeds in their patch) but they were my left over seed King Edwards and went in at pretty much the very last minute (we were waiting for soil for the beds). Unfortunately a furtive rooting about hasn't discovered any spuds , so probably need several more weeks;
Sadly the unprotected turnip and cauliflower bed is as 'chomped' as you would expect but that was no big suprise - need to source some netting for next season if possible;
The courgettes have grown marrows which I've harvested today ready for the Lifestylers to collect and deliver. There were 6 marrows with an impressive combined weight of 16lb 11oz (or 7.575kg);
The runner beans are looking very healthy and producing lots of lovely beans. Unfotunately only 8.8oz (251g) were ready today but that's better than nothing and there are loads more growing on; and
The tomatoes (originally sideshoots from my plants) have gone mad, fallen off their supports but with loads of green tomatoes on them. I didn't have time to sort them out on Friday but have given them a drastic 'haircut' today, removing huge sideshoots which were just starting to produce flowers and, in some cases, tiny tomatoes. I also removed quite a lot of foliage as well to allow air and light into the tomatoes themselves and then repinned them to their supports. If all the tomatoes that are currently on them ripen then the school is in for a bumper crop of cherry tomatoes in a couple of weeks.
Last year a lot of the produce went to waste because we couldn't get in to maintain the beds over the summer which did make me feel a little sad, as no-one likes to see their hard work go to waste. So I'm glad that this year I've been able to do some work and by picking the beans now, hopefully the plants will continue to produce for a few more weeks. Not sure if we'll get any more courgettes as each plant had produced one marrow which I've now taken but it would be good if we could get just a couple more.
Reet
x
A couple of the pupils are doing that Lifestyle thing and are getting together tins of food and the like to give to the pensioners in the villages sheltered accomodation and so this was a chance to see what, if anything, was available for them to use
So it was with some trepidation that the Reetlets and I trundle along to the school on Friday and this was what I found:
Nettles were taking over the rows of carrots - sorted them out;
The parsnip foliage is impressively green and bushy but then so were the weeds - sorted them out too;
The potatoes are doing well (and had smothered most of the weeds in their patch) but they were my left over seed King Edwards and went in at pretty much the very last minute (we were waiting for soil for the beds). Unfortunately a furtive rooting about hasn't discovered any spuds , so probably need several more weeks;
Sadly the unprotected turnip and cauliflower bed is as 'chomped' as you would expect but that was no big suprise - need to source some netting for next season if possible;
The courgettes have grown marrows which I've harvested today ready for the Lifestylers to collect and deliver. There were 6 marrows with an impressive combined weight of 16lb 11oz (or 7.575kg);
The runner beans are looking very healthy and producing lots of lovely beans. Unfotunately only 8.8oz (251g) were ready today but that's better than nothing and there are loads more growing on; and
The tomatoes (originally sideshoots from my plants) have gone mad, fallen off their supports but with loads of green tomatoes on them. I didn't have time to sort them out on Friday but have given them a drastic 'haircut' today, removing huge sideshoots which were just starting to produce flowers and, in some cases, tiny tomatoes. I also removed quite a lot of foliage as well to allow air and light into the tomatoes themselves and then repinned them to their supports. If all the tomatoes that are currently on them ripen then the school is in for a bumper crop of cherry tomatoes in a couple of weeks.
Last year a lot of the produce went to waste because we couldn't get in to maintain the beds over the summer which did make me feel a little sad, as no-one likes to see their hard work go to waste. So I'm glad that this year I've been able to do some work and by picking the beans now, hopefully the plants will continue to produce for a few more weeks. Not sure if we'll get any more courgettes as each plant had produced one marrow which I've now taken but it would be good if we could get just a couple more.
Reet
x
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