After months of me moaning about the slow start
to spring, June has been pretty lovely to us so far. I think we’ve had maybe
one day of rain over the last two weeks, which feels like a miracle after that
soggy, cold spring.
Surprisingly, despite the traitorous spring weather,
the veg garden is pretty much at the same point it was this time last year. We’ve got lots
of tomatoes ripening in the polytunnel, the kale is getting big already, the
beetroot and parsnips are coming along as normal, and we had a bumper
strawberry harvest (I finally got enough to make a batch of strawberry jam, and
I’ve only been trying for four years!). I think the only things that are a
little behind are the squash and courgettes – we’d already eaten our first
courgettes by this time last year, but we’re still a good few days away from
picking the first one off this year’s plants. It’s like the garden didn’t get
the memo that spring was shitty and has just done its thing regardless.
We’re keeping it pretty simple in the veg
patch this year, so that we can focus on improving the flower borders. That means we’re not trying any new varieties
of veg this year (apart from garlic, which I tried to grow once before but it
didn’t separate into cloves because I obviously planted it at the
wrong time). Instead, we’re focusing on the veg that we already know does well
for us and requires little effort on our part.
Saying that, our ‘simplified’ veg patch for
this year still includes:
- courgettes
- butternut squash
- rhubarb
- spinach
- mustard greens
- kale (the usual dwarf curly kale and a
variety called Sutherland kale)
- nasturtiums (we eat the leaves and flowers
in salads)
- garlic
- beetroot
- parsnips
- tomatoes (honestly, I’ve lost count of how
many varieties we’re growing now after the epic tomato seedling fail forced us, yes forced us, to get carried away buying billions of tomato plants at
the local market)
- basil, dill, sage, chives and oregano in massive
quantities, plus a little rosemary, thyme and parsley
- the usual soft fruit bushes and fruit trees that
just get on with it quietly in the background
- and, of course, asparagus (still smug about
it)
I know, I know, it’s still a lot. What can I
say? We’re greedy so-and-sos.
It's a lot less bare than it was a couple of months ago! |
Inside the wonky polytunnel. |
Come on, grow! |
Just a few of the kale plants (with some very sorry looking mustard greens dotted between). |
Would anyone like any dill? Anyone? Seriously, this is supposed to be our spinach and salad bed and all this dill is self-seeded. |
Drying some herbs for the winter. |