No salad days just yet.

I thought I would put up a quick note about how the garden produce is going so far.

The rhubarb and blackcurrant are settling in well, although there has been a brutal aphid attack on the blackcurrant necessitating a bit of prunage.  I think we should get something out of both of these this year.  The gooseberry has been moved to the front of the house to try and loosen the grip of the sawfly.  This is the last chance saloon, but it appears to be OK at the moment even though it only has one berry.  The blackberry (Oregon Thornless) is also growing really well.

The seeds that I have sown in the last month are doing well.  Five out of six courgettes have germinated, which is fine as I don’t need any more (I am trying Partenon again, and it was my one remaining seed of Black Beauty that did not germinate).  My first salad leaves are growing well, I am hoping to make regular sowings and grow just enough for sandwiches or salad for lunch.  The beans and sweetcorn are also growing away nicely, although I don’t have any plans to plant these out for another month (as suggested by Monty Don).  I have included a few pictures of my most photogenic crops below, this is partly a reminder to myself of how they looked before the slugs found them!

Salad Leaf Seedlings
Salad Leaf Seedlings
Golden Neckar French Bean
Golden Neckar French Bean
Partenon Courgette
Partenon Courgette

On the negative side, my tomatoes are progressing very slowly, although they have germinated I think they need to get a wriggle on if they are to be planted out at any time in the foreseeable – none of them have even bothered to think about a second set of leaves yet.

Pak Choi are also growing well, with the beginnings of life beginning to show from the chard (new this year as is the Pak Choi) and radish.

Proud parent announces arrival of beans.

A few weeks ago I planted some courgette, bean and sweetcorn seeds. The courgettes, as expected, took about a week to start to grow in the heated propagator and four out of the six have been sat outside this week in the ‘mini-greenhouse’ that we have outside. The beans and sweetcorn were put into root trainers and therefore were not in a heated propagator (although they were next to the radiator in the garage). These have taken a little longer, but I am not the proud parent of a number of healthy looking beans and sweetcorn. I have tried two varieties of French beans this year, Hildora, a dwarf variety with a yellow pod that I tried last year, but which fed only the slugs, and Blauhilde, a purple podded variety. All of the Blauhilde seeds appear to be growing, and all but two of the Hildoras have made the effort. (Seven out of eight of the sweetcorn minipop are also growing.) I am so pleased by the progress of my beans that I took a photograph of them relaxing in the Spring sunshine yesterday.

beans2.jpg