Friday, March 28

last fuyuna

Finished sowing onion, carrot, beetroot and parsnip outside.
We cropped last fuyuna, some of which are giant.
Actually in Japan local people where they are grown like to eat bolt, though, - Fuyuna is called tona, which means bolt- we decided to clear them and start new leaves.
I sowed komatsuna in a module for the next Japanese mix.

Wednesday, March 26

onion & carrot

Today was the first sunny, still day in a while. We sowed onion(set) and carrot outside.

Monday, March 24

a customer visit

Today, a man visited our garden. He said he bought our salad at the local shop and loved it.
It was great to hear from a customer, especially such a positive comment.
I' d love to create a pretty and productive garden where people want to stop not only buy vegetable but to enjoy watching and hopefully eat or drink in the future.

The Japanese salad are bolting and changing their shape and taste.
I'm taking out fuyuna and yukina gradually to plant new things.
The next is lettuce, rocket and radish. I sowed leek in a module and planted out marygold on the border.

Monday, March 17

Spuds done

95 Orla
29 Colleen

Spuds are go!

Chris:
Planted 40 Orla.
Trenched Cde ready for Colleen

Saturday, March 15

New seedlings

Chris:
Continued trenching the outdoor spud patch ready for planting Orla in the large bed (ABde) and Colleen in (Cde)
Planted 150 Lettuce (cut and come again)
Planted 150 Rocket (Rocula)
I used the new seedling compost for both of these trays.
Also planted out some Rocula directly on (D3)

Thursday, March 13

Apple wrap and Mouse!

Yesterday we caught a mouse in our live trap. Not sure how long it had been there, probably at least 12 hours. We took it home, gave it some seeds and thought about keeping it because it was so cute. But we let it go in a horse field.


Also yesterday, when I arrived the ground covers from the lower field had been blown up into the apple trees, taking the chicken fence with it. Luckily the chickens were too scared by the flapping plastic to escape.
I helped take down the plastic and then fixed the fence and went home for fresh omelette!

Wednesday, March 12

Windy windy

Last night was terribly windy. The previous night we had some glass damage to the front of the Marquee. I always fix things as soon as possible, which in this case was fortunate as from last night the wind blew westerly at 40mph (65kph) for around 14 hours. Missing or broken glass causes the wind to get in and rip more glass away. Our greenhouse survived. Joel's greenhouses have been devastated. Not good.

Our seedlings are coming on, the indoor potatoes are coming up and the Japanese leaf veg keeps on growing! In the last 2 weeks we have supplied 33 bags of salad.
We are now looking at finding more places to sell our produce, such as restaurants, cafes etc and maybe even Treehouse in Aber. We would like to keep it local for ease of delivery or bulk collected for further away.
To reach 100+ units per week would be great!

Sunday, March 9

Happy Surprise

Junka
I am back from London and amazed to see the change.



Outside beds are finely dug out and prepared. Flowers have come out and salad has grown big.
Elephant garlic turned into mammoth! Here is one next to an A4 book - it's over half a metre tall!! Fuyuna and yukina are sturdy and started bolting. We cropped 10 bags - easily could crop another 10 bags. Need more market.
Disappointingly, okra died. Cold frame was obviously not warm enough for okra. Tomato, peppers are alright. Some were moved out too late from the propagator and became leggy. But I think we've got enough.
Tomorrow looks to be super windy. We gave outside beans cloche protection from wind.

Thursday, March 6

Chop-chop, Dig-dig

Chris
Tuesday evening: Back to Borth , popped to the gardens, cropped 300gms of salad. Shuffled the seedlings from propagator to cold-frame.
Wednesday: Dug outside beds Aa, Ab, Ac, Ba, Bb, Bc, Ca, Cb, Cc ... phew!!!
The 500kg of organic seedling and potting compost that I ordered through Sue arrived coutesy of Liz and her van. Due to Joel's back being knackered at the moment, I ended up carrying over a ton of the stuff from the van...!!!
Cropped 1200gms salad, bagged up 10 lots, made up and printed out new labels.
Thursday: Woke up feeling like i'd been run over!! Too much digging, lugging and riding bike into harsh wind.
Delivered 5 bags each to Family Shop and Nisa. Good chat with Gwenda (Mrs Nisa) about the restaurant opening end of May.
Dug out beds Da, Db, Dc, Ea, Eb, Ec - ready for making potato trenches. Had to give up cos i was knackered and blinding headache causing me to go dizzy!!

I checked out the trailer home in the gardens - it's a bit ropy but with a little care and attention it should be livable. We're hoping to spend half our time there, making it easier to look after our crops. I will go to Borth each day to deliver produce and work on my paintings at Janet's.

It's all go-go-go!!!

1.5 kgs of Japanese mix salad on the kitchen table. We need to streamline our process, such as watering, cropping and bagging in one process, ready for delivery.
Working out unit costs is scary. At present we spend over £3 to earn £1.25. This is largely due to capital investment, learning process and economy of scale. It's early days... :o)