It’s late September…

and the asters/Michaelmas daisies are in full flower, with one exception.  The biggest clump will definitely need sorting out in the spring, which as you can see is now far too big and sprawling over the plot and the adjacent grass path.

The exception mentioned above is the white flowering Twinkling Stars which is just starting to flower, and is one of my favourites.

Although I’ve made a start on clearing the flowers patches it’s a bit stop and start at the moment as the cosmos ( see below), nasturtiums and pot marigolds are all flowering better now than they did all through the summer.

It’s dull and overcast today so I’ll be mostly armchair gardening.  However the week ahead is looking calm, dry and mostly sunny with temperatures into the high teens C / low  60’s F which is ideal to do plenty of plotting.

Have a good week, and take care!

I found Foxy…

this morning, who has been completely hidden under the ivy growing on the ground  around the rose Pretty Lady.  He’s been resident for nearly as long as I have as he was given to me by one of the nearby plot holders soon after I took the plot on.  I will properly rescue him, check him over and give him a clean then put him somewhere where he won’t get hidden.

I’ve started to cut back the blackberry bush and rose so I have easy access to the Composter bin when I dig out, and sieve, the compost.

You can see Foxy in this picture half way down on the left hand  side.

Whilst working here this morning the robin was mostly perched, partly hidden,  in the rose bush but I did watch him have a drink from the Composter lid pond.

Have a good weekend, and take care!

Oh look

I hoed and  weeded through the raspberry patch yesterday and was rewarded with a handful of ripe raspberries.  I then looked to see if there were any more hidden out of sight under the leaves but sadly there was no sign of any.

Several weeks ago I removed the remaining rhubarb  leaves and stems, which I added to the compost heap,  then covered the area with a  few inches of compost.  However it doesn’t seem to want stop growing as this picture taken today shows.

The pot marigolds Flighty’s Favourites have liked the cooler weather we’ve had over the past few weeks and have been flowering again.  Among the many orange and yellow ones I noticed this nearly white Snow Princess.  Usually they’re more creamy and I don’t see ones as white as this very often.

Have a good week, and take care!

Early autumn plotting

Over the weekend I finished the rough forking over of the three vegetable patches, having dug up the last of the maincrop potatoes Desiree during last week.  I also tidied up the strawberry patch and cut the comfry down to the ground then added it to the compost heaps.

Since then I’ve done no plotting as the weather has been unsetttled and very variable this week.  Monday it was very windy all day and gusting to well over 40 mph.  There were also a couple of really heavy downpours during the late afternoon.  Thankfully Tuesday was dry and sunny and when I got to the plot after lunch I was relieved to find that all was okay.  It was good to see a few butterflies fluttering round the Michaelmas daisies.  This archive picture is from October 2010.

Yesterday it rained for a cuple of hours before I got up but although it had stopped by breakfast time it remained dull and overcast all day.  Surprisingly tomorrow the temperature is going  up to the mid 20’s C / high 70’s F then getting much cooler over the weekend  and will only be around  16 C / 61 F next Monday.

If it stays dry, and isn’t too windy, then I’ll be making a start on clearing the flower patches.

Have a good weekend, and take care!

On the windowsill, September 2025

Sadly the Gazania Talent Yellow flower bud I mentioned and showed in the post Home and plot  nearly a month ago  never opened, and the much smaller one on the other plant simply didn’t grow.

These plants are perennials which, here in the UK, are mostly treated as annuals when they’re grown outside.  I’m going to see if they survive over the winter, and if they do I will repot into a slightly larger, 5 inch / 12.5 cm, pot and see how they do next year.  If they don’t survive then next March I’ll be sowing a couple of seeds.

I also mentioned and showed a flower stem that had appeared on the Common Nipplewort.  This grew to over 24 inches / 60 cm with lots of tiny flower buds towards the top.  However so far only one of these has opened to show a really small yellow flower.  Being an annual plant the leaves are now beginning to die back.

This plant had been interesting to look at over the past six months and certainly been a worthwhile On the windowsill plant.

Have a good week, and take care!

I rather wish…

that all my plot vists were as good as last Monday which was calm, dry and sunny.  The temperature was comfortable, being ideal for digging.

I lifted some more main crop potatoes Desiree, with most of them being a good size, and showing no sign of any damage. I then carried on roughly forking over the area where I’ll be growing potatoes next year.  The robin was around, mostly perching in the rose Pretty Lady waiting to flit down to where I was when he spotted a worm.

He also made my day when I watched him taking a drink from the mini-pond, the small plant saucer partly hidden behind the compost bin and under the rose. That’s the first time I’ve seen any wildlife drink from it, although I know it’s used as I often have to top it up most days I’m there.

 

The pot marigold growing in the black plastic half-barrel looks like an Oopsy Daisy judging by the height and the vivid orange and yellow colour of the first flower.

Have a good weekend, and take care!

Keeping busy

Yesterday morning I picked the last good tomatoes then cleared the plants, cutting them up and adding to the compost heap.  I’ve been giving most of them away as I usually do, but have enough at home for a week or so.  As I’ve previously mentioned it has been a good year, with no sign of blight.

This morning I picked the last runner beans Moonlight then cut the plants down to add to the compost compost.  I’ve got enough at home for a few meals and have also kept some for the seeds to use next year.  I cleaned the bamboo canes and put them away, standing them upright behind the shed in the pallet that’s one side of the compost bin. I then roughly forked over the ground  where they’d been, which pleased the robin as I was finding a few worms for him.

That just leaves two rows of maincrop potatoes Desiree to lift which will end the season for this year.  Once I’ve finished roughly forking over the three vegetable patches I’ll clear and dig over the flower patches.  Two jobs I’ll be doing over the autumn and winter is to give both roses, Pretty Lady and the dog rose, a major prune and to empty out, and sieve, the compost in the plastic composter bin.

There are still some cosmos flowering like these.

Have a good week, and take care!

Sunflowers next year

I haven’t been to the plot since last Saturday morning, mainly due to the weather being rather unsettled with plenty of rain and showers, heavy at times.  Little wonder that it’s been a somewhat difficult growing season as it was the driest spring for fifty years and the hottest summer on record.  The temperature for around sixty days was 25 C / 77 F or higher so it’s not surprising that I spent so little time most weeks.

I’ve started to think about next year and I’m going to make a special effort with the plot sunflowers to make up for the almost total lack of them this year. I saved the two flower heads from the dwarf sunflower Big Smile  I grew on the windowsill, and was pleased to collect over sixty seeds.  I’ll be sowing most of these on the plot where they should grow to around to around 20 in / 50 cm, and have several flowers on each plant.  Hopefully they’ll go well with my favourite variety MusicBox, which is slightly taller. This picture is from September 2020.

Have a good weekend, and take care!

Summer’s end

I tried some ox-eye daisies in both the stone feature and large half-barrel black plastic container this year but although they flowered they didn’t look happy so I removed them a couple of months ago.  I’ve grown various plants in both with varying success, and I’m now wondering what to try next year.

 

I left the stone feature empty as I didn’t think anything else would have grown well this year.

Perhaps I’ll try again with Pot Marigolds Flighty’s Favourites or dwarf Sunflowers Big Smile which did well last year, as shown here.

 

 

After I’d cleared the half-barrel a few Pot Marigolds seedlings appeared so I left one to grow.

This is it now, and there is a flower bud showing.

 

The weather has changed noticeably since last weekend and over the past few days it’s been much cooler, around 20 C / 68 F, and unsetttled with plenty of showers.  That  looks like continuing  next week.

Have a good week, and take care!

Mostly tomatoes

It’s been a good year for tomatoes  and I’ve been picking plenty of fruit all month.  I’ve grew three red Outdoor Girl, which I mentioned and showed in my post I hope so at the beginning of the month, and three yellow Yellow Perfection, which were slower to ripen.  Since I planted them all out in early June I’ve done nothing except water rather erratically, which probably accounted for a few having blossom end rot or split skins.  I’ve probably picked twice as many red ones as yellow, but all have been a good size.  I’ve found that some have had rather crewy skins which was almost certainly due to them being cooked in the periods of very warm weather.  Not surprisingly there’s been no sign of blight, but with it now being damp and humid it’s likely to appear.

Here are the sedums, looking much better than they did last year.

Have a good weekend, and take care!

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