Life on the Weald (and in the garden and up in the air!) -
June 2021
June started well with clear skies and glorious sunshine for the first couple of days - and brought the hottest day of the year. Thursday 3 June was a little cooler and then the weather forecasters were wrongfooted on Friday 4 June when Sunny periods had been forecast and temperatures in the low twenties - but it proved to be much chillier with continuous rain all day long.
Fortunately the weather improved thereafter with several days of continuous sunny periods and sunshine with no rain, so a lot of watering was required.
The heavy rain in May, however, had resulted in some flourishing growth. This was how the potato plot looked at the beginning of May..............
5 May - the potatoes |
This was me standing between the rows of Nicola & Charlotte.
On the plot, the Yellow flags (Water irises) and Corn cockles had begun to flower
We had a plentiful supply of rhubarb and apart from loads of dessert options I made a start on the rhubarb gin. This entails cutting the rhubarb into one inch pieces, leaving overnight covered with sugar - which extracts the juice - and then adding the gin, putting in jars and leaving for about 4 weeks. Proportions are 1kg rhubarb, 400g caster sugar and 800mls gin. I will report on progress next month.
On the rainy Friday (4 June) I took the opportunity to visit my eldest son, Damien, in London - to take him some rhubarb as well as some chives and English Mace (Sweet Nancy). In return I was offered more chillies - some Kung Pao (which are relatively mild at 10,000 Scoville heat units; Purple Princess (50,000-80,000 SHU) and Demon Red (50,000 SHU). These had been propagated and raised indoors under artificial full spectrum light so I hope they will cope with their new surroundings.
Our garden is beginning to look colourful with Bowles's Mauve wallflower, Weigela, mock orange blossom and Ceanothus as the snow bells fade
And the chives are very popular with the bees. For this reason I have planted several clumps on the plot.
In the garden self seeded Columbines (Aquilegia - granny's bonnet) were abundant; our first foxglove of the year was in full flower, as was the clematis, and the hot-lips salvia was just beginning to bloom.
6 June Columbines with Weigela & Philadelphus behind |
6 June Foxglove |
6 June Clematis |
6 June Salvia (hotlips) |
And even in the street there is colour - this poppy has self seeded in a pavement crack by a garden wall.
6 June - street flower |
Over the weekend I had planted out some Swede plugs which I had bought at the garden centre as they were going cheap! (Let's avoid any argument, Sylvia and our northern friends call them turnips - its all part of the north-south divide. Down south we call a turnip a turnip (brassica rapa) - that's a "white" turnip, what the French call navet. What southerners call a Swede - short for Swedish turnip - (brassica napus) is known in Scotland and up north as a turnip or commonly "neeps". In some countries including America it is called rutabaga.
Well, whatever you choose to call it, the pigeons seem to love it along with most of the brassica family and by Tuesday they had eaten most of the green leaves, so I have resorted to some temporary cloches in the hope that they will recover and then I will need to think about some netting.
7 June - protection for the Swedes |
In contrast, the parsnips are not attacked by pigeons and do not require netting (unless it is to keep away the carrot fly).
Swedes/turnips are members of the brassica (cabbage family) and their leaves are edible (not just for pigeons!) - turnip tops are among the most delicious greens. Parsnips, however, are members of the carrot family and their leaves contain toxins which can be harmful to humans. The leaves when handled can also cause an allergic reaction resulting in dermatitis.
At the weekend some of my broad beans looked ready for picking. We began to pick from those that had been sown in the autumn and we also had our first picking of mangetout peas on the Monday. The later sown broad beans are showing signs of blackfly so will need their tips pinching out (which I will take away and destroy) I will also spray the plants with soapy water to discourage further infestation of blackfly.
6 June - autumn sown broad beans |
7 June - Oregon mangetout peas |
7 June - freshly picked mangetout |
As well as the peas and broad beans we also picked some chard which was coming to the end of its season and beginning to go to seed. We have planted some more which will be ready later in the year but, in the meantime, the perpetual spinach planted earlier this year will soon be ready for picking.
At home the Weigela was now in full flower......
I had also sown several varieties of Basil indoors, Lavender, Red Rubin, Thai, and Lettuce leaf and decided to introduce them to the sunshine.
Lavender basil, red Rubin basil, lettuce leaf basil & minette |
I still have two other varieties to sow, Lemon and common Sweet Basil
We have regular pickings of mangetout and broad beans and are enjoying them with many meals. We have picked over 7 kgs of broad beans which have yielded around 2kg of podded beans, some of which have gone in the freezer for deferred enjoyment. There are still more to be picked.
At home the paeonies are putting on a great display - not yet in full bloom.
8 June - Paeonies |
8 June -Paeony |
One week later, 13 June, and the paeonies are in full bloom
13 June - Paeonies |
13 June - Paeony |
The courgettes are beginning to develop flower buds and the Cosmos are also flowering.
...and the Nicola and Charlotte 2nd early potatoes are beginning to flower.
The back garden was looking colourful with sunflowers, wild geraniums and dianthus in flower....
...and on Plot 247 the red currants were ripening, protected from birds by netting....
14 June - red currants ripening |
We were still picking mangetout regularly and also harvested a few Hurst Green Peas
The courgettes were flowering
The parsnips were overgrown with weeds, so some careful hand weeding was needed.
In addition to harvesting potatoes, I was able to pick some courgettes. If left any longer they would have become marrows with all this rain! Picking them frequently also encourages more to grow.
Saturday 26 June was the day to pick the redcurrants. The netting was a good investment and had protected them from the birds.
On the positive side, we were able to pick some of the very early Santee purple sprouting broccoli
The foliage on the garlic (Provence Wight) was dying back, so I lifted one to see how it was doing. It looked fine but was very damp so we need some sunshine for them to dry out and ripen. I will partially lift them to aid the process.
We had been expecting sunny weather for the last weekend in June and getting some work done on Sunday 27 but within minutes of arriving, despite the forecast , it began to rain. Some woodchips/prunings had recently arrived and before the rain came down, I managed to collect a couple of bags full to repair the footpaths; now a job for another day.
Early June had been fine and sunny and the week beginning 14 June brought temperatures in the high twenties but by mid-week there was a real change with thunderstorms and heavy rain. Temperatures remained in the low twenties and winds were light, so not too much damage was done and the rain brought on a real growth spurt, not only for the vegetables, but for the weeds and and wildflowers.
All over the allotment there is a sea of poppies - some, the wild field poppies (Flanders poppies) but also escapees from gardens which have naturalised. These beauties are growing on the border between our plot and our neighbour on 246.
14 June - self seeded poppies |
Everything was looking green and lush.
14 June |
And in moving some debris, I was pleased to see we had no shortage of slow worms.
Slow worms are completely harmless to humans. They are not actually worms - they are legless lizards and beneficial to the garden as the live on a diet of invertebrates which includes slugs and snails and insects which damage plants. They also indicate that the soil is rich in organic matter. Apart from being beneficial, they are a protected species so if you uncover one the best thing to do is to leave it to find its own safe environment or cover it back over with soil or vegetation.
The Chard was now going to seed, but still hade a lot of edible leaves and the perpetual spinach was ready for picking.
I had been hoping for fine weather for the weekend as my charity abseil from the i360 tower in Brighton was scheduled for Sunday morning 20 June. The morning started with the threat of light rain and the i360 was shrouded in mist. Fortunately the mist cleared and the sun came out just in time for my jump. I was accompanied by my daughter Zoë and granddaughter, Tilly. Here is a video of my rather inelegant jump - but the rest of the journey was smooth.
Apart from an occasional light shower the day remained bright and sunny and in the afternoon I managed a brief trip to the plot to gather some spinach, kale and mixed greens for Zoë to take home. I must have done something right in parenting as my children love their greens!
On Midsummer Day (Monday 21 June), however, we turned on the central heating as the temperature plummeted and heavy rain arrived. The rain continued into the following day with a temperature of only 13C. Summer did return on Wednesday and mid week saw sunshine with temperatures in the mid-twenties but by Friday the rain was back again and it was decidedly cooler with a maximum temperature of 17C.
The rain had brought some healthy growth for the Tromboncinos and I had made a frame for them from an old broken garden bench that I had found. The problem is that they don't seem to know what it's for and insist on trailing along the ground so I have had to give them a bit of encouragement by tying them to the frame!
23 June - tromboncinos |
I have sown some dwarf French beans in one of the raised beds and have tried to provide some protection from rats and mice with some wire mesh. There was a self seeded chard plant in the bed which I decided to leave there.
I planted out some Patty pan squashes that had been sown indoors and provided some temporary protection with improvised cloches from plastic bottles.
I had lifted some of the first early Duke of York potatoes and made use of the space released by planting out some purple sprouting broccoli. The broccoli that had been planted out earlier in the year, Santee variety, was beginning to form florets. When it said "early", I thought October/November but a look at the seed packet says it can be harvested from July! The variety I have now planted is Rudolph and should be ready to harvest some time between November and March (provided I find some protection from pigeons!)
23 June - cloches on Patty pan squashes |
I had lifted some of the first early Duke of York potatoes and made use of the space released by planting out some purple sprouting broccoli. The broccoli that had been planted out earlier in the year, Santee variety, was beginning to form florets. When it said "early", I thought October/November but a look at the seed packet says it can be harvested from July! The variety I have now planted is Rudolph and should be ready to harvest some time between November and March (provided I find some protection from pigeons!)
23 June - purple sprouting broccoli |
The parsnips were overgrown with weeds, so some careful hand weeding was needed.
23 June - parsnips |
In addition to harvesting potatoes, I was able to pick some courgettes. If left any longer they would have become marrows with all this rain! Picking them frequently also encourages more to grow.
The potatoes were a respectable size but not as good as the Red Duke of York last year, possibly due to the lack of rain earlier this year. They taste good though - there is nothing quite like freshly lifted new potatoes, steamed with a sprig of mint and served with butter and parsley. We have a plentiful supply of flat parsley which comes back year after year, close to our prolific sage bush which is threatening to take over the footpath! Just waiting for it to flower when it will be swarming with bees.
It was time to give some attention to our rickety shed. We had acquired this from a neighbour 4 years ago and it had lain in pieces on the ground throughout the winter before we erected it. It has served us well but is in serious need of repair but I doubt if it will last more than another year. Still, I thought it needed a coat of wood preservative which meant removing the grape vine which sits in a pot at the front but which is beginning to trail over the shed.
On 25 June - just in time for Wimbledon - I was able to pick some strawberries growing in an old flower trough at home.
25 June home grown strawberries |
Saturday 26 June was the day to pick the redcurrants. The netting was a good investment and had protected them from the birds.
As it was a wet weekend I decided to stay indoors and make Red currant jelly
A few years ago I made Red currant jelly with port by adding two tablespoons of Port per 1kg of fruit, stirred in to the jelly just after it reached the setting point and beginning to cool. BBC Food has a recipe for Red currant jelly with mint which entails adding a sprig of mint to the fruit before boiling and straining and then adding chopped mint to the jelly at the setting stage. Maybe I will give that a try next year.
Inside the mini-greenhouse, the Apache chilli was bearing its first fruit.
... and outside the water lillies were flowering on the pond and the scarlet flax (linum) on the edge was in flower too.
We have had quite a lot of good news - I am particularly pleased that the autumn sown broad beans survived the storms and produced lots of beans before the blackfly arrived and I was looking forward to the crop from the later sown beans, some of which had been attacked by blackfly. We had managed to stop too much damage by pinching out the growing tips, hosing down and spraying with soapy water. What we were not expecting was that half the crop would be eaten by rodents, probably rats! We had not experienced this problem in previous years but note that some of our neighbours have been similarly affected. There appears to be a decline in the Fox population at the site but an increase in Rats.
26 June - damage to broad beans by rats? |
On the positive side, we were able to pick some of the very early Santee purple sprouting broccoli
26 June - Purple Sprouting Broccoli (Santee) |
26 June, broccoli, Cavolo nero & purple kale |
The foliage on the garlic (Provence Wight) was dying back, so I lifted one to see how it was doing. It looked fine but was very damp so we need some sunshine for them to dry out and ripen. I will partially lift them to aid the process.
26 June Garlic (Provence Wight) |
We had been expecting sunny weather for the last weekend in June and getting some work done on Sunday 27 but within minutes of arriving, despite the forecast , it began to rain. Some woodchips/prunings had recently arrived and before the rain came down, I managed to collect a couple of bags full to repair the footpaths; now a job for another day.
Tuesday 29 June was a fine day with the temperature in the low twenties. The garden at home was changing colour with the sunflowers, wild geraniums and dianthus in flower/
I lifted the fleece cover on the Swedes, which had protected them from the pigeons and left them partially covered to see how they might fare.
The gherkins which I had planted out and protected with bottle cloches were looking OK so I planted out the remainder and am hoping they will climb over my recycled bed frame!
On the last day of the month, I strained the rhubarb gin.
April and May saw some very odd weather patterns and June has been very varied - a period of hot sunny weather in the middle but a lot of rain either side. We are hoping for more settled weather in July and a bit more like an English summer.
29 June - gherkins with Crown Prince Squash in between |
On the last day of the month, I strained the rhubarb gin.
30 June - Rhubarb gin |
John Austin
Hove, June 2021