Wednesday, August 26, 2009

August in the Patch

I’m a week or so behind in doing so but today I planted up my spring & summer veg to get started in the warmth of my little green house.

Tomato Lycoersicon esculentum
Black Cherry - Eden Seeds
Tatura Dwarf - Eden Seeds

Capsicum Capsicum annuum
Toppero Rosso - The Italian Gardener
Eggplant Solanum melangena
Thai Green - Digger's seeds

Planted into Veg Garden this month :
seedlings of Derek’s Asian Greens sensopai & tatsoi

Spinach
Leeks

chicory

Cos Lettuce - Derek Poulton

Carrot Daucas carota -

Chantenay Red-Cored - Eden Seeds
Parsnip Pastinaca sativa

Hollow Crown - Saved by D. Poulton
Beetroot Beta vulgaris

white Heirloom Mix - Eden Seeds

Elephant garlic sets - passed on by L.Watts

Self Sown - Celeriac

Also ready to set seed are the rocket & bok choy (white stemmed) these I will let self seed in garden and towards the end of spring I will choose the best producers/survivors and save those seeds.

I have cleaned up a lot over the winter added espalier wires behind my apple trees and a growing frame for the cucumbers and Luffa, strengthened the archway (it had pretty much fallen down by the end of last summer). Along with a little compost making, cleaning/sharpening of my tools & soil improving along the way, I have had a reasonably busy winter.

Why not try some flowering stuff in your patch as well, like: nasturtium, petunias, marigolds (French) and celosia. These guys are great at attracting pollinators and beneficial insects to your patch. interplant them with you veges and the bugs will get confused, and they look great as well.
If planning on putting in some tomatoes next month, prepare a bed now (your toms will thank you for it). At the bottom of my planting hole, two or three crushed chicken eggshells (cheap organic source of calcium) blood and bone heaping tablespoon of pure worm castings, two plain aspirin tablets. Aspirin has been shown to increase disease resistant of tomatoes, in addition to increasing blossom production. Fill hole with a little soil then plant on top. I then water fortnightly with worm tea , seaweed concentrate and two aspirin watered down to a weak tea colour and sprayed on plants as a foliar feed.

There's a bit happening in the vegie patch, so you could try spinach, broad beans, Jerusalem artichokes (put them in a pot or they can take over!!), potatoes, peas, onions, parsley, cabbage, broccoli, rocket, silverbeet, cauliflower, lettuce, leek, Asian greens, radish, beetroot and parsnip.Get spraying! To prevent peach leaf curl (which also infects Nectarines, Almonds and other Prunus species), spray your trees once a week with a low environmental impact copper spray from mid to late winter, or from when you can see the buds swelling!


No comments: