Another fierce frost followed by another glorious day. We could do so much in the garden if only the ground wasn’t so cold. It does seem churlish to complain, and I know there will be many awful rainy and overcast days ahead but I am so desperate to get on. The small bit of salad we have in the tunnels is just sitting there, we haven’t one daffodil in flower and as our garden is north facing the frost hangs around until mid day.
Meanwhile, we are cleaning up the place. We’ve cut down a diseased flowering cherry this morning. A few more logs for the fire next winter. I was helping Peter clearing up the debris when the plumber arrived to sort out a problem with the solar panels. It is always amazes me how easy it is to be distracted. So I thought I’d come in and start this. Now I’m about to be distracted from this to get some lunch. Sometimes I yearn for a day that I can go out into the garden and work all day without having to think about anything else.
I’m back, back to the hedges. This is one job that has to be done in the next couple of weeks, before the birds start nesting in earnest. We have Grisilinia sheltering our vegetable garden and vast amounts of Escallonia elsewhere. I wish now that we hadn’t used Grisilinia but at the time I thought the fresh green of its leaves contrasted well with the Escallonia we had everywhere else. It grew so fast and did the job required very quickly, but it is so vigorous that it’s major job every spring to keep it under control. Originally we clipped it into a pretty wavy edged hedge but that is long gone. Escallonia also grows very fast but can be really hacked back if it gets out of control and, amazingly it will come back from just stumps. Of course, if we took out the hedge trimmers more often during the summer we wouldn’t have so much work to do each spring, but in a large garden with limited labour, hedges are the last thing on my mind.
I feel a little panic setting in when I think of all the work to be done before Easter when we open. The weeks are flying by and each day I seem to be slipping back a little bit more. I have even brought the propagator and trays of seedlings into the conservatory to speed things up a bit, but we couldn’t put anything out anyway.
So patience is the order of the day.
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
After such a hard winter, yesterday seemed to me like the beginning of spring. There was a little frost, but I soon started to shed layers of clothing as the day warmed up. The question now is where do I start? There is a lot of general tidying up to do, huge gaps to fill, seeds to sow hedges to cut…. The list goes on. What I need is a plan.
So, I have made a plan of the vegetable garden and at least know where everything will fit in. I have to do the same thing for the flower borders as we will have to completely rethink them after the winter. I have lots of ideas mulling around in my head and the most interesting one for me at the moment is to mix things up a bit more.
I’m going to try to grow more flowers and herbs in the vegetable plots and herbs and vegetables in the borders.
The things I have in mind are lots of purple sage, ruby chard and Redbor kale amongst the flowers and wigwams of Blauhilde French beans amongst the sweetpeas.
But the sun is streaming through the window and it’s too good a day to miss. So I’m off outside to get started.
So, I have made a plan of the vegetable garden and at least know where everything will fit in. I have to do the same thing for the flower borders as we will have to completely rethink them after the winter. I have lots of ideas mulling around in my head and the most interesting one for me at the moment is to mix things up a bit more.
I’m going to try to grow more flowers and herbs in the vegetable plots and herbs and vegetables in the borders.
The things I have in mind are lots of purple sage, ruby chard and Redbor kale amongst the flowers and wigwams of Blauhilde French beans amongst the sweetpeas.
But the sun is streaming through the window and it’s too good a day to miss. So I’m off outside to get started.
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Good Food Thoughts
Last night we traveled to The English Market in Cork to support Good Food Ireland Cork Week. We have been Members of Good Food Ireland for a couple of years and last year were lucky enough to win an award for our Café.
We took along some baskets of cup cakes made from our popular beetroot cake recipe, to add to the fantastic range of food and food products supplied by other members. It was great to meet so many like minded people who work to provide seasonal, local, artisan food on a daily basis, supported and encouraged by Good Food Ireland.
The event was very successful with a huge crowd of people coming to taste everything on offer. Congratulations to everyone involved.
This morning we’ve woken up to a promising spring day, so it’s back to the garden. The vegetable garden needs a lot of attention. After a wet autumn and a crisp frosty winter I haven’t given the garden much time and now I need to catch up. We have practiced a no dig system for many years with great success, maintaining fertility by mulching with our own compost, seaweed, lawn mowings and sometimes manures. Normally all our raised beds would have been heavily mulched for the winter, but it didn’t happen this year, which is worrying. So now we have to catch up.
We have lots of compost and an easy source of seaweed but I’m worried that the soil is still too cold to mulch. A heavy mulch will hold the cold in the soil, slowing down the potential for growth. There are plenty of other jobs to do. I’m going to clean up the border that edges the south and west side of the garden. In this mixed border we grow flowers, herbs, rhubarb and ornamental vegetables such as ruby chard and decorative kales. A varied mixture which encourages beneficial insects, butterflies and birds to our garden as well as looking really beautiful.
Below is the recipe for the beetroot cake:
250g light muscovado sugar
200g sunflower oil
3 eggs separated
150g beetroot (grated)
150g raisins
1/2 a lemon
250g self raising flour
1 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp bicarbonate of soda
pinch of salt
1. Beat the sugar and oil together (about 1 minute)
2. Add the egg yolks, beat
3. Add the beetroot, raisins and the juice of half a lemon, mix
4. Sieve the flour, baking powder, salt and bicarb and add to the mixture with the cinnamon. Fold in with a metal spoon.
5. Whisk the egg whites and fold in.
6. For the cupcakes it takes about 20 minutes at 170*C.
For the Icing ::
150g icing sugar
250g mascarpone
200g philadelphia
Zest of 1 orange
Mix them all together.
Fresh Ideas
After such a grueling spell of weather over Christmas and the New Year I wonder how much of my garden will survive.
Living in West Cork for twenty years I have grown used to a relatively benign climate. I have ignored reminders to wrap up vulnerable plants and lift my dahlia tubers, I’ve left pots of pelargoniums on the terrace and seen no harm come to them for many years. Well, I’ve certainly learned my lesson this winter.
Of course, I won’t give up yet and I’ll wait anxiously for signs of new growth, but if all else fails this will be the perfect opportunity to try some new ideas and even better, new plants.
I want to change the herbaceous borders, to try out different colours and heights. Large spaces can now be found as huge clumps of dahlias will have been destroyed by frost or severely depleted. If I do replant dahlias, I will choose those with smaller heads and more compact growth to cut down on the staking required. But I think I’d like to try Dierama, or “Angels fishing rods”. I have just one in the border at the moment and it really is beautiful. Dainty and delicate with grass like leaves and nodding funnel shaped flowers in shades of pink and violet.
Our huge old Hydrangeas have been badly frosted and will probably have lost next years buds, so I will not hesitate to cut them back. In the spring after the worst of the frost is over I will give them all a good trim. The flowers will therefore be really late, but by cutting them back I can open up space for other interesting shrubs that will spread the flowering season, or maybe an evergreen to give more structure in the winter.
We’ve had fabulous Echiums for the last couple of years, they really have that wow factor. It is so tempting to just leave them to self seed and continue to impress, but having lost them in the cold weather, I will have at least one years gap as I have to resow (they are biennial) and I already have new ideas for change. I’m thinking of Verbascum olympicum, it grows 1.5 to 2 metres from large grey basal leaves with numerous golden yellow flowers. Luckily it is easily grown from seed so I can be generous with the planting.
So although I know I will have pangs of sadness when much loved plants fail to pop up this spring, it will force me to move on and enjoy choosing new plants and planning new combinations. We have seen some extreme weather patterns recently and nature has given us an unexpected push to look with fresh eyes. It’s going to be a challenge but gardeners thrive on challenges.
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Day One
Miserable wet day in West Cork but have started my blog so things are looking better already! Hope to add more interesting posts soon ...
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