Sunday 19 July 2015

New shelters

This week we've been improving the shelter in the garden. Another southerly gale came through so we decided to make some extra wind break fences for vulnerable plants. First up were the Jerusalem artichokes, which are getting quite tall. They now have wind break fabric on three sides and potato plants on the fourth.

Jerusalem artichokes - almost a full-surround system
Then we rigged up some protection for our new fruit bushes. The Saskatoon berries, especially, were not coping too well with the wind.
Fruit bush protection
And since the chicks were rapidly outgrowing their nest box, Jim fixed up an old hen house with run with a whole lot of free polycarb. The chicks are delighted with their new accommodation and have been grazing a lot. One of them even seems to have a fondness for ground elder.

The two silver greys
New chick accommodation
Loitering by the door
Looking distinctly cocky
And this was the week of one of the culinary highlights of the year - our first new potatoes. A bit delayed because of the frost damage and the cool weather but no less delicious for all that. Dunluce is a winner.
Dunluce First Earlies
In the veg garden, everything is growing slowly but steadily. A bumper crop of broad beans this year and very good beetroot. The salads are plentiful and the fennel looks like it's going to bulb though one plant bolted - I thought you needed heat for that.

Rocket and Salad Bowl Red 
Fennel

Parsnips doing well
We also finished preparing the new leek bed and planted 99 leeks. This was more akin to quarrying - a lot of back-breaking labour for Jim. From a soil book in our local library we found out that our soil is glacial till (loam with greywacke stone) and there sure is a lot of stone.

New leek bed
And all the stone removed from it
Meanwhile, I've sown the rest of the new planting area in the middle paddock with turnips, lots of spring cabbage, kohl rabi, carrots and salad leaves.
The new planting area, with comfrey in foreground
Now it's time to tackle the top corner of the garden, before painting the house and running a quasi hotel for the summer. Jim's already started by building a mighty fine stone wall.

The heather slope is doing well and weeding is getting easier

Jim's new wall






Tuesday 7 July 2015

Hens and roses

Domino watching over the chicks
Did anyone say heatwave? The only place that reached 37.5C here in the past few weeks has been the incubator, where we've been hatching our first batch of chucks. Otherwise, 22C was the limit, now fondly remembered.

Tough start to life   

The first hatchling
Now transferred to the brooder
It was fascinating to watch the entire hatching process in the incubator. We had a couple of late nights! It takes about 21 days for a chick to hatch. After 7 days you candle the egg to make sure there are signs of life. Out of our nine eggs, six developed and five hatched - not a bad rate. On day 21 the chicks start to pip a hole in the shell, but that's so exhausting that they take a long break after the first hole has been made and then later continue work on breaking off the end of the egg to get out. We got five cute fuzzballs, one brown, one yellow, one white and two silver-grey ones. Now it will be quite a wait to find out what sex they are, though the yellow one and one of the silver-greys are much larger and more assertive than the others - so maybe they are cock birds.

In the garden there is now produce, though everything is weeks behind. We have:

Aguadulce broad beans
Tasty rhubarb of unknown variety
Kelvedon Wonder peas
And the first tomatoes are turning red
Outside, we haven't had to water anything and everything is very green.
Freshly mown middle paddock
There are roses everywhere, and a few other flowers, too, but mainly roses. The previous owner was an afficionado so we have an enormous variety. And I have to say, David Austin roses make a lovely tea.

One of the posh David Austin roses
Dog rose
Another of the posh roses
Wild rose in the hege
Beautiful catnip flowers
The lavender is out
I've resown several veggies: squashes, beans, sweetcorn and asparagus. It will be interesting to see if the season is long enough for them to ripen (and for the asparagus to do anything at all). In the meantime, the original squashes and courgettes seem to have recovered. Phew!

First courgette forming