Showing posts with label bees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bees. Show all posts

Wednesday, 8 August 2012

Holiday harvests

It seems like a long time ago since my last post... I am currently on a two week holiday from work, and the first week Em and I spent in a holiday cottage in Somerset, which was amazing. This was the sunset there the first night...


It was wonderfully relaxing, but it has been equally relaxing and rewarding being back home and  returning to some steady seedling progress and some encouraging harvests(!).


Recently we had to move the hen house from the back of the garden to the front, and so I decided to relocate my plants and greenhouse to the space vacated by the chickens. A bijou potter's paradise, if you will...


It's starting to look very promising in the greenhouse, with radish and beetroot front on the top shelf, dwarf beans and kale behind; cabbage at the front on the second shelf, fennel and spring onion behind - all growing well... I had to re-pot the dwarf beans and fennel as they seemed top heavy to me - in other words, needing a little more room to grow down under...


You could see in the left of the wide picture the runner bean plants, which are still producing flowers higher up the canes. I took my first handful of beans from them the other day - perhaps a little undersized, but I prefer them on the tender side. They were delicious in a sticky rice I made - the recipe for which will follow soon...!


I also emptied one of the potato grow bags - the leaves were looking decidedly pale, and they were beginning to droop and go brown, so I decided to cut my losses. I was happy with the result though - about a kilo of white potatoes. Still not sure about the variety, but I used them in a vegetable curry and they were a lovely texture.

It was the first time I have emptied a potato bag, and it was like digging for treasure! I also guess that's the reason that no matter how small, I kept them all (note a few of them that are no bigger than marbles). I'm sure someone could start a business selling the little ones as 'popcorn' potatoes... seems a shame to think that on an industrial scale they may go to waste for not being the correct size...

I also took a chance on what surely must now be the last good rhubarb of the season - I last said that around a month ago... unprecedented growth from the rhubarb patch this year. I have frozen it and I am using it in a number of experimental dessert/baked recipes(!). 

This picture has an unusually soft focus - not sure why...?!
Elsewhere in the garden, the honey bees seem to be enjoying the buddleia - Em was sat nearby watching the chickens and came up with these shots... there are some even better shots  of bees taken by Sue at Green Lane Allotments.


We have two sets of bee traffic in the garden (they have been very kind in pollenating my veg, so it seems rude not to give them a mention!) - the bee top right is one of the ones from under our shed; whereas the other three are clearly a different breed... someone down the road sells honey from their drive, so I think they may have found their way along from hives there.

On the plot front, it won't be long now before I'm over there again, planting out some of these seedlings - the dwarf beans are pretty much ready, and I think the beetroot are almost there too... I'll keep you posted...

Monday, 2 July 2012

A bean broadside


This is the second year I have grown broad beans... again, not to any great scale (like the peas), but just for enjoyment's sake... I have four plants in a trough container.

I'm growing the Bunyards Exhibition variety - and if I'm honest, I don't know what that means - as long as the plants produce a lot of pods, I'm happy!




I've found both times that I've grown broad beans that I get a lot of flowers, but the ones that open first toward the base of the plant all fall off... It seems that only the higher ones turn into the pods...


Another empty flower stem... why?

I'm in the dark as to why this is... this year especially there has been enough pollenating traffic from bees (we appear to have a nest under our shed), so it's not as though they miss out...

Thankfully, and not like last year, an unprecedented number of flowers higher up the plants are turning to pods, so as long as I keep them watered and fed, I should get a decent batch...!

I've pinched out the top of the plants as you're supposed to - I just wonder whether in order to get some really good beans, you have to thin some of the successful flowers... oh the agony of choice - any practical advice greatly appreciated...


A cluster of pods poking through the dead flower heads
As ever with growing, if you mess it up at least you know not to do it again next year...