Thursday, October 13, 2016

Extending the season.

With the weather being so unpredictable we decided that we would put more land under cover, there seems to be little in the way of normal weather nowadays, it can be quite disheartening to plant out seedlings or plants at what should be the correct time and then lose them due to unseasonable weather.
This was this years potato patch, ideal for the new tunnel.
The new tunnel is the same size as the other one, 18X20 ft.
Hoops all in place.
The company who supplied and installed it were very professional,
Up with the cover.
they arrived on time and on the right day, (maybe a first for Ireland) and had the whole job completed in just four hours despite there being quite a wind.
Four hours latter, the finished job.
The tunnel is a tight as a drum.
We had not got  the timbers for the raised beds as we didn't want to litter up the site with unnecessary obstructions, but as soon as they had finished yesterday we were off to get the first ten scaffold boards, today we have picked up the second load. Second-hand scaffold boards are a good way of making raised beds without spending a fortune, under cover they last very well, and even the ones in the veg garden are showing no signs of rotting after five years. The new tunnel will have seven raised beds in total, one will be for permanent planting, such as our fig tree which does not like being outside, we are also getting a second peach tree, they do very well in a tunnel. That will leave us six beds so we can have a good rotation with the first tunnel. It will be good having two uncover areas when it's raining cats and dogs outside.
Another giant cauliflower.
The veg garden is still producing well, for some reason our late cauliflowers are huge, weighing in at at least three pounds after trimming and eight inches across. The Calabrese is also still giving us lots of heads.
A three legged carrot.
Carrots always do well for us but I have no idea why this one should have produced three  forks, the bed has received no manure or compost for at least two years.
 We are getting a few Autumn raspberries but for us they don't do as well as the summer varieties. Physalis is another thing that always does well for us, the vines are now four years old and still producing well.
Red oak.
Blue berry.
My favourite shrub, Spindle, masses of berries this year.
There is now a lot of colour from the trees and bushes,
More blueberry colour.
but the flower gardens are still giving us lots of flowers for the house, so many things have giving us a second blooming.
The overflow bed, for all the herbaceous plants that need splitting. 
The O.H has also created another flower bed for me to take the overflow. I have so many plants crying out to be divided this bed will be full before I know it. I still have masses of bulbs to be planted as well, due to sciatica I haven't been able to do much in the garden, but it is slowly getting better.
Half a free range pig, butchered by Matt who did a great job. 
Having decided to not keep pigs anymore has given us a problem in obtaining good pork. Organic pork is very hard to get and in fact we are on a waiting list with the farmer who supplies us with beautiful beef, but it will be six months or more before he has any. Free range pork just does not exist in the shops, so it is a case of knowing someone who 'does pigs'. Fortunately we do know someone like this, we know the pigs were well looked after and enjoyed their outside life, we meet them a couple of times and they were happy pigs, so we managed to buy half a pig, free range, and very local, they were reared just eight miles away, we will be having local free range pork chops for dinner tonight.
Freddie likes a bird eye view. 

14 comments:

  1. I wish I had a polytunnel too! If I win a big prize in the National Lottery, I'll buy one and squeeze it into my little garden somehow! Does Freddie like free-range pork? He certainly has a menacing glint in his eyes! :)

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    1. polytunnels aren't expensive Mark and are worth their weight in gold. All year round gardening plus earlier and later crops.

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  2. Great tunnel, good job getting it up. Love the three legged carrot

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    1. The extra covered space will be great B.G, I love weird shaped veg, veg with attitude.

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  3. Nice work! Such an adorable kitty ♥

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    1. Thanks Summer. Freddie is a lovely boy, follows me around like a dog would.

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  4. Awww, the photo of Freddie made me chuckle, he's keeping his eye on you. It will be great having more inside space in which to grow things, they certainly got moving with the installation.

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    1. We were very pleased with the way they installed the tunnel, have started planting it up already. Freddie is a real cute cat, loves to watch everything that's going on.

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  5. Wow! The tunnel looks great. Glad they got it up so quickly. I love the Autumn reds. And I also love that snap of Freddy! Glad to hear your sciatica is improving, especially now you have a nice new bed to play with! xxx

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    1. Thanks Lauren, the new bed is filling up already.

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  6. Ah yes, a good pork is indeed, hard to fine. We raised our won for decades then here on The Poor Farm just raised four and sent them off to the locker. Soon we'll have our meat but many folks are saying the supply is drying up. Not enough folks have the time, land or desire to raise anymore especially when folks will pay pennies on the dollar for very bad pork in the store. We are lucky to have enough customers for our small herd but those about us who like us in the past, raised 50-100 pastured hogs, are going out of business. Here in Illinois 97% of the pork is raised in confinement. An awful life for the pig and awful meat for the consumer.

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    1. Hi, I very much doubt that 3% of pork here is raised outside, I have never seen 'Free Range' in any shop, it fact there are no EU standards for 'Free Range 'pork. We know of a producer who wanted to sell into stores under the Bord Bia label, it took them three years as there were no standards to base it on. People say how awful the conditions are on pig factory farms yet still buy the pork from the super market, if they were truly bothered they would refuse to buy.

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  7. I will be interested to see your new poly develop, I haven't a clue what to do with mine!

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    1. I'm sure there are some good books that cover poly tunnel growing Chickpea, however I will cover how we have set it up and why we have done it that way in my next post.

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