30th May

The weather is so changeable at the moment; warm then cooler, sun then rain, encouraging some growth but also slugs and snails finding this year’s first ripening strawberries and blackfly clustering on the tops of outdoor broad bean plants, even before the pods have started to appear…

That said, amongst other veg, the onions and garlic are looking good, (as is our take-home harvest), and the tomatoes in a polytunnel are developing well.

Plants being added include sugar snap peas, courgettes and squash, while egg shells are being used to try to protect celeriac plants.

23rd May

A cooler morning but much done at the farm.

We harvested radishes, cucumbers, spinach, broad beans and asparagus and await future harvests from new plantings of sweetcorn, celeriac, peas, climbing beans and aubergine.

The start of May

In the polys, side shoots are being removed on the tomato plants, cucumbers are growing, spring onions continue to be thinned and replanted in extra rows, and pepper seedlings planted after rotovating manure into the soil.

Outdoors, comfrey is harvested for addition to the compost bins, preparation is underway for the pole beans, pea shoots are looking good and the new strawberry beds are being covered with nets, as they’re in a more exposed area than previously.

A week later

and a beautiful morning.

An automatic drip-line irrigation system has been installed in our largest polytunnel, which should reduce the time spent hand watering this year’s plants, tomatoes and cucumbers.

We harvested chard, leeks, broccoli, spinach and our first crop of the year, asparagus and radishes.

4th April.

Work has commenced on what will be the sweetcorn bed ie removal of mypex, then weeding (it’s amazing how determined thistles are to grow under the mypex) and sieving the soil.

The under-cover broad beans are well in flower.

The worcesterberry bushes, (cut down earlier to see if they’ll recover from last year’s attack by gooseberry aphids), have new shoots, plus the removal of stinging nettle roots, or as many as could be located!

The construction of posts and bamboo supports in the polytunnel for this year’s tomato and cucumber plants, means many are now in situ.

The end of March.

Work has started to clear one of the polys in readiness for tomato plants, started at home but now definitely needing transplanting. In other polys, spring onions, spinach and radishes are growing.

Outdoors, the spinach/chard bed is being dug and shallots planted.

Weeds have started to push through the wood chips laid on the paths between the strawberry beds, so carboard is being spread, then wood chips but we may also add straw on top.

Kestral potatoes have been planted in one of the potato beds and then covered with plastic, while after a final rotovation of the onion beds, red and white sets are now in.

Our watering system is being modified to allow for automated watering.

The final photo for March, shows we’re still taking home a tasty harvest.

6 days later.

Jobs being done, when it’s not raining for a change – pruning autumn raspberries, continuing work on the hügelkultur bed, adding straw to the strawberry beds, placing weed suppressing mats around the young gooseberry bushes and “trying” to remove nettle roots entangled in the worcesterberry bushes. The bushes have been severely pruned in the hope they may regenerate, after no fruit last year and an inundation of gooseberry sawfly caterpillars.

In the polys, lettuces are flourishing and broad beans are well in flower.

It’s March already.

Time to clean the plastic on the polytunnels; certainly the difference can be seen.

Work is continuing on our new hügelkultur bed.

It appears rats are appreciating warmth/protection under the cardboard covering a no-dig bed, while spinach and chard are still cropping in this area. Some cabbage stems have been left in the hope more small plants will be produced.

Our homemade compost is looking good and we must be doing something right, as our take-home produce looks (and tastes) great.

1st February

On a beautiful winter’s morning, among other jobs, we finished adding wood chips between the new strawberry beds and planted home started, spinach seedlings in one poly. The lettuce seedlings and broad beans in the other polys are growing, while the outdoor no-dig beds are protected under covers.