I was looking round the site one day last week and noticed a lot of forget-me-nots, then wondered why I didn’t grow any. At home I browsed some gardening books, then looked at various websites and decided I should grow them both on the plot and at home.
I found this small flowering plant on an untended plot which I dug up and is now in a 3 in/7.5 cm pot on the windowsill.
I’ve bought a packet of the common Forget-me-nots, or true wild form, (Mysotis arvensis) which I’ll sow in various places.

Chiltern Seeds list a white one (Mysotis sylvatica Snowsylva). In the description it says these are perfect pot plants so I’m going to try some and hope to get one as good as the one in this picture (with due thanks to Chiltern Seeds).
For a really lovely picture of some Forget-me-nots along with some folklore about them have a look at this tweet of Venetia Jane’s.
Have a good weekend, and take care!
I started planting out the potatoes on Friday and I’m just doing one row of ten each time I’m there, which is easier for me nowadays. It also means that I’ve got time while I’m there to work on the flower patches, and the main one is now ready to start sowing seeds. I generally just hoe all these areas over before sowing but I’ve forked cosmos corner over as it was the soggiest area on the plot apart the bottom corner by the crocosmia. That should help to dry it out quicker. I took this picture in August 2021.
I’ve always grown onions Sturon and generally do well with them. I buy the sets from the horticultural society trading shed and plant them out around the end of March or beginning of April. I’m a bit late this year as the ground has been so soggy but on Monday I planted out half of them, and will do the rest over the weekend. I’m happy when they grow to around the size of a tennis ball, but they do generally vary. Last year wasn’t a good year, which I think was due to the hot weather which restricted the size to about a golf ball. This archive picture shows two I grew back in 2017.
This week I also sowed three each tomato seeds Gardener’s Delight and Golden Sunrise in pots which will stay on the windowsill until I take them to the plot to harden off and plant out in early June. These I also generally do well with, but blight often hits them towards the end of August most years. This archive picture is of both varieties which I grew back in 2018, and they’re in a 6.5 in/16.5 cm plant saucer to show their size.
I also cut the rest of the cornus stems down to ground level. There’s not much I can do with this area so I’m going to scatter flower seeds there.

Yesterday I only looked round and pottered as it was all much too soggy again.

I’ve only dug up and brought home any English daisies I’ve grown in pots at home but I sowed some seeds which have just started appearing. The small plant I showed last month produced a couple more flowers but then died, I think due to my over watering it. A couple of weeks ago I dug up a couple more from one of the plot grass paths and they’re now in a 3.5 in/9 cm terracotta coloured plastic pot. There’s been a couple of flowers, and there are more buds showing.
The three blue flowering asters (Michaelmas daisies) have all reappeared but I’m slightly concerned that there’s no sign of the white flowering Twinkling Stars as yet. It does flower later than the others so I may be worrying unduly about what is one of my favourite plot plants. This archive picture was taken late October 2019.
I have grown a few tulips some years but they don’t last more than a couple of years sadly so I haven’t bothered in recent years. I’ve always prefered the traditional cup shape with red, white or yellow flowers. A nearby plot has a few red ones flowering at the moment which caught my eye so I went and had a closer look at them.
potatoes next week for the first time since last June as apart from enough for a couple more meals I’ve used all I had stored.
