Hungerford allotment blog - grow your own, harvesting and vegetarian cooking. Enjoying allotment wildlife, weather and other things that catch my attention.
Enjoying time on the Marsh Lane Allotment site in Hungerford, Berkshire.
A record of successes, failures and a handy reminder for me.
From 2017 each post title brings a song to add a little extra music to the world - enjoy!
We have froglets! The tiniest you’d ever see! I’m so happy 😊
There are a least five. The weird thing is that there are still lots of tadpoles which haven’t even developed legs yet. And, weirder still, the frogs are smaller than the tadpoles! 🤔 Here you can see how small this one is compared to duckweed.
After a bit of a chilly start to the week, yesterday was lovely and, because it was a Bank Holiday, the site was really bustling. We planted out our three types of climbing beans: Scarlet Empire runners, Lingua di Fuoco borlotti beans and Blue Lake French beans.
Jamie’s planted the All Green Bush courgette and the Sunburst patty pan. We’ve put slug pellets around these small plants with netting/fleece for protection from the weather and to stop the birds eating the pellets - they are the legal ferric phosphate ones, but we’d still prefer the birds to steer clear.
I’ve sown another row of carrots… 3rd time lucky? And I’m pleased to see some of the parsnip seeds have germinated on the ‘paper towel trick’, so I’ll plant them today.
I finished digging the other trench in the squash tunnel after we’d had a bit of rain at the beginning of the week. So the ground is waiting for the plants now…. They’ve just begun to germinate, so are a bit slower than I’d hoped.
As you can see, Plot3 is still a plot-in-waiting, but at least it’s weed-free now though it won’t be if we don’t get some plants in soon!
Here’s me with fellow committee members, Liz and Richard, with our HAHA-decorated jubilee tree. All the organisations in the town were offered a High Street tree to decorate. And this is what my pompom bees were for, along with seed packet/veggie home-made bunting and decorated flower pots.
We wandered up the High Street yesterday to look at the other decorations. I think it’s a nice idea. Here are a few of the trees. I really like the Nursery School’s golden wellies 🙂
Anyway, back on the allotment. We’ve been potting on marigolds, colourful chard and amaranthus (love lies bleeding).
We’ve had our first harvest of delicious broad beans.
Before applying spray to the annoying black fly, which always breed quicker than the ladybirds 😖
And I thinned the beetroot so enjoyed those thinnings with a halloumi dinner the other night. They were rather earthy-tasting - needless to say, Jamie didn’t want any 😀
The potatoes were earthed-up and fleeced at the end of May as there was concern for a frost. It was fine, only dropping to 3.5° then on the night of June 1st the thermometer recorded 1.4°! But no frost damage.
There are more bees and beetles about and we watched this lovely mullein moth caterpillar chomp through a flower on the wildlife plot (apparently they can stay as a pupa for 5years!) but butterflies and ladybirds seem to be laying low at the moment. We need a few less blowy days I think.
Anyway, it’s time to get back onto the plot. Great song by Kate Bush dedicated to our army of tiny frogs (apparently that is the collective noun).
Fabulous caterpillar, and it all looks very neat and organised down at the plot. The froglets are brilliant too. Hope you have a good bank holiday weekend. CJ xx
An enjoyable read and good pictures. It always surprises me how tiny froglets are. I gave up growing broad beans as they always got infested with black fly. Happy plotting. xx
We once reared tadpoles at school when I was teaching and some just grew into large tadpoles and never made it into frogs, As for parsnips ours are rubbish this year. Terrible germination after two sowings
Fabulous caterpillar, and it all looks very neat and organised down at the plot. The froglets are brilliant too. Hope you have a good bank holiday weekend. CJ xx
ReplyDeleteThankyou, a 4-day weekend is perfect at this time of year! The plots are looking a bit bare, but this rain is good timing!
DeleteAn enjoyable read and good pictures. It always surprises me how tiny froglets are. I gave up growing broad beans as they always got infested with black fly.
DeleteHappy plotting. xx
Ohhhh, but broad beans! They’re so delicious fresh from the plot!
DeleteWe once reared tadpoles at school when I was teaching and some just grew into large tadpoles and never made it into frogs, As for parsnips ours are rubbish this year. Terrible germination after two sowings
ReplyDeleteOh! Perhaps we'll have permanent tadpoles too. I wonder if it's because there were too many tadpoles in a small pond. We'll see
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