What are you havesting
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- A selfsufficientish Regular
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Re: What are you havesting
The squirrel stripped our hazelnut trees bare over a month ago. Darn that squirrel
Re: What are you havesting
Just spent a busy day harvesting different veggies for bottling and freezing, so I know pretty much what's ready in my garden.
Maincrop potatoes
Salad potatoes
French beans
Borlotto beans
Broad beans
Runner beans
Peas
Snap peas
Carrots
Onions
Spring onions
Shallots
Garlic
Melon turnips
Summer cabbage
Savoy cabbage
Tender stem broccoli
Courgettes
Butternut squash
Cucumbers
Sweetcorn by the bushel
Blueberries
Raspberries
Loganberries
Blackcurrants (still !)
Strawberries
Apples
and 11 different varieties of tomato
Curiously NO lettuce .... I missed a successional sowing.
Maincrop potatoes
Salad potatoes
French beans
Borlotto beans
Broad beans
Runner beans
Peas
Snap peas
Carrots
Onions
Spring onions
Shallots
Garlic
Melon turnips
Summer cabbage
Savoy cabbage
Tender stem broccoli
Courgettes
Butternut squash
Cucumbers
Sweetcorn by the bushel
Blueberries
Raspberries
Loganberries
Blackcurrants (still !)
Strawberries
Apples
and 11 different varieties of tomato
Curiously NO lettuce .... I missed a successional sowing.
Tony
Disclaimer: I almost certainly haven't a clue what I'm talking about.
Disclaimer: I almost certainly haven't a clue what I'm talking about.
- snapdragon
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Re: What are you havesting
Eucalyptus leaves, my neighbour decided that his Eucalyptus tree was too close to the house (it growed and growed) so he's cut it down. Some smaller branches and leaves are in my yard in process of being stripped for dye (I hope) some to be dried some already in the pot. (not quite sure if the bark will create a different colour as yet)
Say what you mean and be who you are, Those who mind don't matter, and those that matter don't mind
- baldybloke
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Re: What are you havesting
Courgettes, tons of the blighters. Running out of recipes now.
Has anyone seen the plot, I seem to have lost mine?
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Re: What are you havesting
Odsox, I see you are harvesting Borlotti beans, are these dwarf ones? My dwarf ones are almost ready although I will leave them until they are dry, but my climbing ones are very vigorous and full of leaf but almost devoid of pods.
Also do you grow melons, mine are the size of peanuts, I thought they were normally bigger than that by now.
We are not so keen.on cabbage as you seem to be, but I try not only to have lettuce 12 montHs of the year but also calabrese (every month except Jan and Feb I think).
Also do you grow melons, mine are the size of peanuts, I thought they were normally bigger than that by now.
We are not so keen.on cabbage as you seem to be, but I try not only to have lettuce 12 montHs of the year but also calabrese (every month except Jan and Feb I think).
Re: What are you havesting
Hi Graham. My Borlotti are climbing ones, dwarf French beans of any variety just rot in my high humidity so I always grow climbing to get the bean pods away from the soil. I have two different plantings of Borlotti this year, my normal position up the back wall of the greenhouse and for the first time in the polytunnel. The greenhouse ones I've been picking the dried beans for about a month now but the tunnel ones have far more lush growth and the pods only started to turn scarlet a couple of weeks ago, but now that I can actually see them there appears to be a very good crop.
Melons , I grew two troughs of them starting them off in my potting shed window where they set several fruits, then I moved them to the front of the greenhouse and they immediately aborted the embryo fruits and produced only male flowers. I left them there for a couple of months before chucking them out on the veg garden where they are still debating amongst themselves whether to live or die.
I'm a tad annoyed with my lack of lettuce. Like you I grow them all year and this year I grew them continuously through the frost and snow and then when it's dead easy to grow them ... I forgot to sow follow-on for at least a month.
Last year and this year I have been growing the tenderstem broccoli which has been very successful. I'm going to try growing them though the winter this year together with some cauliflower that I have timed to head up in November ... it will be interesting to see if my calculations are anywhere near accurate. The idea is they should "hold" for longer in the cooler weather and not blow, I really hope so as I have planted 10 of them.
You can't beat a nice sweet Savoy or January King cabbage for dinner with bubble & squeak the next day.
Melons , I grew two troughs of them starting them off in my potting shed window where they set several fruits, then I moved them to the front of the greenhouse and they immediately aborted the embryo fruits and produced only male flowers. I left them there for a couple of months before chucking them out on the veg garden where they are still debating amongst themselves whether to live or die.
I'm a tad annoyed with my lack of lettuce. Like you I grow them all year and this year I grew them continuously through the frost and snow and then when it's dead easy to grow them ... I forgot to sow follow-on for at least a month.
Last year and this year I have been growing the tenderstem broccoli which has been very successful. I'm going to try growing them though the winter this year together with some cauliflower that I have timed to head up in November ... it will be interesting to see if my calculations are anywhere near accurate. The idea is they should "hold" for longer in the cooler weather and not blow, I really hope so as I have planted 10 of them.
You can't beat a nice sweet Savoy or January King cabbage for dinner with bubble & squeak the next day.
Tony
Disclaimer: I almost certainly haven't a clue what I'm talking about.
Disclaimer: I almost certainly haven't a clue what I'm talking about.
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- A selfsufficientish Regular
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Re: What are you havesting
Hi Odsox, oh dear, what's happening to my climbing Borlotti. OK they are outside, but they went in in good time and suffered no set backs. My runners and french climbers have been a mass of flowers and pods for ages, even the butter beans, which are slower, are covered in flowers but the borlotti just masses of leaves, hardly a flower, let alone pod.
Looking at my spreadsheet we were eating melons last year in a couple of weeks at the beginning of September and that was a bad year. It does make you scratch your head this gardening lark.
Looking at my spreadsheet we were eating melons last year in a couple of weeks at the beginning of September and that was a bad year. It does make you scratch your head this gardening lark.
- phil55494
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Re: What are you havesting
Potatoes, courgettes, peas, kale.
The onions could be pulled if we wanted to but the apples will be a while yet.
Very envious of those with the time and space to get loads out of gardens and allotments. Still what we're getting is many times more than when we were starting out on our half plot (bare ploughed earth like everyone else on the new site).
The onions could be pulled if we wanted to but the apples will be a while yet.
Very envious of those with the time and space to get loads out of gardens and allotments. Still what we're getting is many times more than when we were starting out on our half plot (bare ploughed earth like everyone else on the new site).
- southeast-isher
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- DrewShiel
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Re: What are you havesting
We've got peas coming in in large quantities. Well, I say "in", they rarely make it to the house, but there're still lots of them. The courgettes are in full blast, the blueberries are doing well, and there are even a few somewhat unexpected strawberries from plants we put in this year. We've also had some of the spinach beet.
There are some blackberries in the garden hedge, too, which are always a nice bonus. Actually, they're growing very well from a bramble I cut back last year, so I think some more strategic pruning and maybe some layering might be worth trying there.
And we found several of what are either damson or bullace trees at the weekend (maybe some of each) depending on your definitions, so that'll be getting some attention soon as well.
There are some blackberries in the garden hedge, too, which are always a nice bonus. Actually, they're growing very well from a bramble I cut back last year, so I think some more strategic pruning and maybe some layering might be worth trying there.
And we found several of what are either damson or bullace trees at the weekend (maybe some of each) depending on your definitions, so that'll be getting some attention soon as well.
Re: What are you havesting
nuts nuts and more hazel nuts
loads of tomatoes and runner beans
the first of me cabbage is ready to
loads of tomatoes and runner beans
the first of me cabbage is ready to
Darn that Wabbit
- bonniethomas06
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Re: What are you havesting
New just in at our plot...
Red cabbage
rainbow chard
few leuttices (but I am sick of 'em now)
Cavollo nero kale
carrots
beetroot
raspberries/few strawbs still
parsley/corriander/dill/basil
tomatoes
cucumbers
red/green peppers
courgettes and other squashes
potatoes
onions (red and white) and garlic
And I am absolutely CHUFFED to bits that I have 5 gorgeous bright orange pumpkins which are almost ready! Sweetcorn is getting there. Not a sign of a butternut squash though :-(
Red cabbage
rainbow chard
few leuttices (but I am sick of 'em now)
Cavollo nero kale
carrots
beetroot
raspberries/few strawbs still
parsley/corriander/dill/basil
tomatoes
cucumbers
red/green peppers
courgettes and other squashes
potatoes
onions (red and white) and garlic
And I am absolutely CHUFFED to bits that I have 5 gorgeous bright orange pumpkins which are almost ready! Sweetcorn is getting there. Not a sign of a butternut squash though :-(
"A pretty face is fine, but what a farmer needs is a woman who can carry a pig under each arm"
My blog...
http://www.theparttimesmallholder.blogspot.com
My blog...
http://www.theparttimesmallholder.blogspot.com
- Millymollymandy
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Re: What are you havesting
Walnuts and apples and a few hazelnuts too. There are so many nuts this year even the thieving red squirrels can't cope. My deceased neighbour's tree (property is up for sale) which overhangs my orchard has dropped nuts everywhere - normally he used to come and collect them but I am crunching all over them - and don't need them as my own trees down the other end of the orchard are totally loaded.
The apples trees are so overloaded too I don't know what we are going to do with them all - and I can't seem to give them away cos everyone else has got loads!
The apples trees are so overloaded too I don't know what we are going to do with them all - and I can't seem to give them away cos everyone else has got loads!
http://chateaumoorhen.blogspot.com/boboff wrote:Oh and just for MMM, (thanks)
- Green Aura
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Re: What are you havesting
Blackberries and green tomatoes.........lots of green tomatoes
Maggie
Never doubt that you can change history. You already have. Marge Piercy
Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage. Anais Nin
Never doubt that you can change history. You already have. Marge Piercy
Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage. Anais Nin
- Millymollymandy
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Re: What are you havesting
But Maggie at least that's an improvement on radishes!
http://chateaumoorhen.blogspot.com/boboff wrote:Oh and just for MMM, (thanks)