Posts

Re-editing the Plot

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View from the top of the plot I've been spending quite a lot of time at the allotment lately and already the above view is looking quite different. Much tidier! I've been meaning to write about my plans for the plot since I gave up half of it just over a year ago, but last year's dreadful season meant I never got around to it. The thicket you can see are my raspberries 'Autumn Bliss'. These of course are remaining because they're prize winning . Last year I experimented with not cutting the canes down in February* and as a result obtained an earlier crop and a heavier yield. Definitely worth repeating this year. Behind the raspberries is a mess of gooseberries from which I'm currently trying to extract a vigorous bramble. So far the bramble (aided and abetted by the gooseberries) is winning... And guess where this view is from... My major project at the moment (apart from plot clearing) is the installation of some raised beds. After the task ...

April is the Blog Love Month IV

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Colander lights add a quirky touch to Yeo Valley HQ  I'm veering off-topic - as I frequently do here on Veg Plotting - with some non-gardening blogs which have caught my eye this week. Don't worry, there are a couple of gardening ones by way of a finale too :) First up is my beloved NAH. After years of teasing me about Veg Plotting , he finally started his own blog a couple of years ago. He's putting a steam engine back together without the manual - or many of the parts! Have a look at how he's progressing on Sentinel 7109 I've just found out about the fascinating  neolithic houses project at Stonehenge. It's something I hope to investigate personally next month . It's a small hop, skip and a jump to my Local Vocal  Janice's new blog Immaterial Practice documenting her progress and discoveries in the 30 days up to her Fine Art degree show. Found via my friend Mark's blog , I love Perpetua's  way of roving in retirement. Not a blog,...

Salad Days: Windowsill Lettuces

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Lettuce 'Amaze' looking rather perky a couple of days ago What a difference a few weeks makes! Spring has sprung at last and those leggy seedlings I showed you last month are transforming themselves into something rather tasty looking. I've now planted out all my lettuce seedlings into the coldframes and cloches outside, except the pictured 'Amaze'. As you can see from the above picture they're romping away on our bedroom windowsill. The initial 22 varieties I sowed are now down to 18 - 2 failed to germinate as reported last month and a further two - Mordore and Musson melted away in the overcrowded legginess that was the initial tray of seedlings. I'll catch up with these and some further varieties I've acquired later on in the year. This month I've taken delivery of several exciting looking items of kit to trial courtesy of Greenhouse Sensation. My initial efforts have focused on the simplest item they've sent: the small Saladgrow pl...

Wordless Wednesday: Union Flag With Goose

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Plant of the Centenary: The Official Shortlist

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Starting to bounce back after a hard winter: Erysimum 'Bowles Mauve' in my garden yesterday We had a lot of fun choosing our own Plant of the Centenary , and now we get to do it all over again with the RHS's official shortlist  :) There are some truly landmark plants: Russell hybrid lupins; a Heuchera,  and Geranium 'Rozanne' - how many plants can claim to be the subject of a court case ? There's also a nod to the gardening legacy shaped by the plant hunters, in the form of Pieris formosa var. forrestii My congratulations goes to Shirl, whose chosen favourite is amongst the shortlist of 10: the pictured Erysimum . Sadly I can't find my picture with a hummingbird hawk moth dancing attendance one summer, so I've had to make do with a snap taken yesterday. Each plant has its champion, matched by their decade of birth as well as the plant's Chelsea debut. It's worth looking at them on the RHS's site, purely for the wonderfully na...

What Spam Looks Like

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No, not that tinned pink meat of a dubious nature, the other spam... It's clear there's been a LOT of spam around lately. By a lot, it's meant up to 50-80 extra comments for my blog on some days. This is what a spam attack looks like via my stats on Blogger. I'd often wondered why there were sudden spikes shown, but it took a rash of notification emails with attendant spam comments, all coinciding with 08:22 one morning for me to twig what was going on. On bad days, those spikes are happening every half an hour or so. It's not just Blogger with the problem. I see Wordpress has also warned of increased levels of spam and hacking attempts recently. I've noticed various types of spam comment along the lines of: Nice blog, I'll be back for more - really funny if it also compliments your writing on a Wordless Wednesday post ;) Asking advice on theme, hacking, plagiarism etc. Advising you of a problem with your blog or how you could do better Complet...

April is the Blog Love Month III

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Porch still life - Great Dixter March 2013 Week three of my version of Emma Cooper 's Blog Love Challenge sees me discovering blogs which are celebrating gardens - especially theirs - as my homage to National Gardening Week . Firstly there's Pauline from Lead Up the Garden Path , who celebrates the return of her St Patrick . We gardeners love talking about the weather, so here's a blog which keeps tabs on gardening and the weather in Ossett, Yorkshire. Helene has been a regular, thoughtful commenter here over the past few months, so it was lovely to discover her multiple-collage celebration of her garden this week. Not a garden, nor a new blog (though sadly I haven't visited in ages, so it feels like a new blog again), but I had to share Val Littlewood's willow sketches from Pencil and Leaf . A Blooms Day discovery this week is Mario and Hortus | 5 - thoughtful posts and good presentation of  his beautiful images Rosie at Leavesnbloom has some lov...

Blackbird Singing in the Middle of the Day

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It's not just the flowers which have woken up to spring this week at VP Gardens : at last the birds are singing strongly. I couldn't resist taking a short video of this male blackbird singing its heart out on the public land next to our house. He seems to be responding to another blackbird further away, which suggests he's probably proclaiming his territory or fitness to breed to the other males in the area. The greenfinches have started 'zooming', a woodpecker is tapping away and the resident song thrush in our garden is my current alarm call in the morning. I've also seen reports of the first swallows arriving to these shores. As soon as I hear the chiff chaff, then my spring will be complete. Which birds have you heard in your garden lately?

Breaking the Rules: Sprouted Lentils

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I've learnt recently lentils have a strong urge to keep on growing. I sprouted some as usual for my Salad Challenge , but last month's exceptionally cold weather turned our appetites away from salad. So this batch got shoved in the fridge for a couple of days until the weather warmed up. Except it didn't and a few days turned into a few weeks :o I knew beansprouts of the shop bought variety are grown in the dark (weighted down to keep them stumpy), but I thought the cool temperature of our fridge would stop the lentils growing. After all, the text books say a minimum temperature of around 5 o C is needed for plant growth. That puts them firmly into my Against the Odds series too ;) The shoots are etioliated as expected, but I'm surprised the tiny leaves are green rather than the chlorotic yellow usually seen when plants grow in the dark. Perhaps the occasional burst of light as we go to the fridge for milk or whatever is sufficient for chlorophyll producti...

GBBD: Blackthorn Winter

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We've just emerged, blinking and rather wan, from the coldest March in over 50 years. Much of the garden is only just beginning to stir into life and after a day's warmth the blackthorn - which has remained tightly in bud throughout the cold spell - has rather ironically burst into bloom. I say ironically, because a blackthorn winter usually refers to a late cold snap in late March or early April. Had it bloomed when it seemingly wanted to last month, then I'm sure we would have seen the phrase touted regularly around the weather reports. As it is, its blossoming now serves as a warning. We may at last have some longed-for warmth, but winter could just as easily return. The blossom gives away its Prunus heritage (it's Prunus spinosa - an apt name): such starry flowers on bare branches. A simple flower, but beautiful nonetheless. Soon the petals will be strewn across my front garden like confetti. This year the blossom is prolific, which will be good for this e...