The climbing beans tunnel looks quite sparse but is producing a surprising amount of beans and lots more flowers too.
They were part of this early morning, pre-work harvest along with our first courgette (the plant has been sitting in a pot for months with the weather refusing to let its fruits mature!) and our first cucumber. Mmm, home-grown mini-cucumbers are so delicious.The larger turnips were past their best so went to the compost, but the little ones were tasty roasted with potatoes.
And this trug has our first harvest of tomatoes (well, the first that have gone home), radishes, stripey courgette and some leggy carrots (purple and orange).We had a tasty salad with 7 home-grown ingredients. The imperfect carrots in mayo made an excellent tasty coleslaw.
These ipomoea were from seeds from my Cousin Jen. Such beautiful colours and they’re beginning to climb the frame now. Related to the dreaded bindweed, which I’m still fighting on our plot. We had a HAHA workday this weekend where we cleared a plot which has been given up. It was completely covered in white-flowering bindweed. We’re not fooling ourselves into thinking the problem is gone but now it’s covered in a plastic sheet for a while it’s at least contained. It’s been a particularly good year for bindweed 😖
The female pheasant, with her remaining two chicks likes the un-loved plots, but they’re less popular with the neighbours! The pheasant herself also has her fans and her haters!
It was breezy and unexpectedly misty and perfect for a bit of digging, so I cleared the area on our plot where the broad beans were and the leeks will soon be planted.
You can see that the soil is actually bone dry as soon as the Sun appeared.Which gives me the opportunity to use Paul Simon’s great song title - dance-along now!
Good post and pictures as usual. It's at this time of year when we're harvesting and taking things home that it's all worthwhile. xx
ReplyDeleteOh yes! It’s worth the wait!
DeleteI've grown ipomea too. Bindweed is a real pain in both the garden and on the plot. It's impossible to eradicate. Our ground is too dry to dig. If we try we end up with huge hard lumps.
ReplyDeleteThe bindweed that covers bare ground and hedges is beautiful purple, but I’m sure the gardeners there hate it as much as we do! Terrible stuff 😖
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