I remembered we have cucumber moulds, so the continuous supply of Baby cucumbers are now looking different.
On Tuesday morning we were greeted on site by a ‘flight’ of swallows (I prefer the collective noun ‘gulp’ actually) on the overhead cables and it was marvellous when they all swooped off together. And there was also a flock (a ‘charm’) of goldfinches. It was a beautiful morning actually, shame I only had an hour. The birds were clearly relieved that the rain had arrived and the extreme heat had past (thought it was still very warm).
Tuesday evening we had the most torrential downpour. We opened the windows to enjoy that welcome sound and smell.
The next morning the rain gauge showed it to have been a proper drenching - 25mm in one night.
Too late for the French beans (right) which seem to have gone over very quickly but the runners (left) are still producing flowers at the top and the borlotti/gigantes wigwam (centre) is looking bushy and healthy.I needn’t have fretted last week. As Flighty pointed out, the cob tassels will soon arrive after the flowers start providing the pollen. And here they come on the Lark sweetcorn.And look! The Lizzano outdoor tomato has given it’s first fruits - what a feast 😁 Well, it’s quality not quantity that counts! And you can see, there should soon be more…Trugs are colourful at the moment with the chard and more of the Salad Blue potatoes. Also a Nicola potato and I podded those French beans to have with orzo (a pasta, which rather seemed like slippery rice on eating), What the Cluck and a sun-dried tomato pasta sauce.
Last night I used chard to make a sort of colcannon with the Nicola potatoes. It was very tasty, but I think I should have made sure there was less water in the chard before mixing with the spuds. Although it wasn’t sloppy, it didn’t quite mash properly. It’s served with What the Cluck and garlicky-shallots.
Today it’s feeding day for the plot, though it’s certainly beginning to feel a bit Autumnal which is sad. It’s still a lovely temperature and no rain expected today. Even the clouds in the photo below, from yesterday, didn’t produce rain. It’s probably just because we’ve got used to blue skies and sweltering heat. But there are plenty more flowers and veg on their way, lots of deadheading to do and surely more cucumbers and courgettes to pick!Aah, this song will pretty much sum up today I think. And what a great song by the Small Faces! Can’t believe I haven’t used it before. For the rest of today, I shall be mostly speaking in cock-nay 😆
Oh I am so envious of your rain. We have promising cloud formations but they never deliver,=. We have the female tassels on our sweet corn but the pollen doesn't seem to be running from the make tassels yet. I;m concerned that it is the dry weather and the cob just won't be fertilised.
ReplyDeleteWe always give the fertilisation a help in hand, but invariably get some dodgy cobs. This webpage is interesting and does mention how high heat can effect fertilisation. https://www.krugerseed.com/en-us/agronomy-library/corn-pollination-and-fertilization.html
DeleteFingers crossed but unfortunately it’s a surprise until the cob is opened 😣
I always waft the stems to help our sweetcorn along but the problem is that the pollen isn't running so nothing happens when I waft.
DeleteI didn’t think sweetcorn minded being dry, but it seems it does. Fingers crossed for you Sue
DeleteThank goodness for the cooler weather and the rain. Your cucumbers are delightful. We are growing sweetcorn this year and so far, so good. I'm looking forward to see what you do with your blue potatoes.
ReplyDeleteJamie made mash with some of the blues the other day. They had quite a lot of white in the larger tubers, so the mash was lavender coloured ☺️
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