Piglet’s Plot in April

This year I’m keeping a photographic diary of my humble vegetable garden. In theory, if I take photographs on the 19th of each month they will offer a direct comparison as to what’s growing when, where and how well. The purpose of the exercise is to provide a record for next year so I can learn from my successes and, hopefully my not too many failures.

Piglet's Plot  19th April
Piglet’s Plot 19th April

Weeks of nigh on continuous rain has resulted in my broad beans developing rust. Apparently rust is an airborne fungal infection.

Useful tip from The Greening of Gavin

You can spray the fungus with a 1 part milk to 10 parts water mix which also works on powdery mildew on any of the cucurbit family (zucchini, cucumber, pumpkin, squash).

I hope he does not mind me quoting his words, but I thought the tip was worth sharing. Unfortunately, I ignored the signs and lost my remaining crop. A valuable lesson learned for next year!

Rust Attacked my Broad Beans
Rust Attacked my Broad Beans

Thankfully, I did manage to harvest several kilos of favas (broad beans) before I removed the infected crop. Check out my delicious Salada da Favas.

Favas (Broad Beans)
Favas (Broad Beans)

The onions, planted in mid November continue to thrive.

Onions
Onions

Much to the delight of the snails and slugs the french bean seeds, planted on the 13th March, are peeping through the soil . In desperation I did scatter some organic slug pellets. (Piglet hangs her head in shame). However, an army of ants removed them in the dead of night.

French Beans
French Beans

This year I only planted four red cabbages. Last year I planted twelve which was far too many.

Red Cabbage
Red Cabbage

Fruit Trees

Nespra (loquat) tree

Our nespra (loquat) tree is now 6 years old and this is the first year we’ve had an abundance of fruit. In fact, I’ve even made some nespra and onion chutney.  Researching loquats on Wiki I discovered they are high in Pectin. I think I will freeze some and then add to my strawberry jam.

The loquat has a high sugar, acid, and pectin content. It is eaten as a fresh fruit and mixes well with other fruits in fresh fruit salads or fruit cups. The fruits are also commonly used to make jam, jelly, and chutney, and are often served poached in light syrup. Firm, slightly immature fruits are best for making pies or tarts.

Nespra Tree
Nespra Tree

Orange Tree

Last year we had blossom, then tiny oranges however, they withered and died for no apparent reason.

Finally some blossom on my orange tree
Finally some blossom on my orange tree

This year fingers are firmly crossed the oranges will set and we will be eating our own home-grown oranges by Christmas.

Fruit trees growing in containerS

I now have three peach trees growing in pots which were all looking healthy until two developed a strange disfiguration to the leaves.

Problem with peach tree
Problem with peach tree

growing Fruit and Vegetables  in containers

Green peppers

This is the sole surviving green pepper from the plugs I planted back in February. It’s a tenacious little soul…

The pot is a recycled plastic paint container.

Red Pepper
Red Pepper

Strawberries

My strawberry plants just started to yield a bumper crop and we went away for two weeks. Sigh… Still there were still plenty when we returned. They are so sweet and far more flavoursom than the forced strawberries we used to uy in the supermarkets.

Strawberries growing in a container
Strawberries growing in a container

raspberry bushes

I’ve never grown raspberries before, not even in the UK so not quite sure the best way to care for them. I have three growing in pots and another three in the ground.  All are doing well, so fingers crossed.

My first raspberry flowers
My first rasberry flowers

Baby Leaf Salad

I only planted these on the 13th March! Have you noticed the container in which they are planted? This is definitely pushing the meaning of “salad bowl” to the limits.

Growing Baby Leaf Salad in a Container
Growing Baby Leaf Salad in a Container

Cucumbers in pots

I inherited these baby cucumber plugs from a friend who mistakenly bought them for zucchini.  The plastic collars (made from water bottles) will hopefully deter the snails. However, the snails and slugs in our garden all possess Olympic gold medals, so I doubt it

Baby Cucumber Plants
Baby Cucumber Plants

Aubergine plant growing in pot

I bought two aubergine plugs back in February. One I planted in a pot, the other in the ground. My intention was to make a direct comparison, month by month. Unfortunately, I forgot to take the other photo. If I had a brain I’d be dangerous.

Aubergine
Aubergine

Mystery plant

This pot was originally home to cucumber plants which fell victim one night to snails on a recki mission.  Then about a week later, three seedlings appeared from nowhere. I called them a gift from God, because was I cursing those wretched snails. I don’t know what these are – maybe melons?

Mystery Plant
Mystery Plant

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Notes
20/3 Harvested first crop of broad beans planted from seed on the 24/10
1/4 I bought another fig tree (green fig)
1/4 planted 12 perpetual spinach and 4 cucumbers

Weather in April
Cold and wet!

Related posts
Recipe: Salada da Favas
Piglet’s Plot in February
Category Archives: Growing fruit and vegetables in Pots
Category Archives: Growing Fruit, Veg and Herbs

38 thoughts on “Piglet’s Plot in April

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  1. Your photo diary is a good idea! I often look back at old pics for a timeline on previous years’ plants, but this would be a record of everything in one place, with regular progress. You DO have a green thumb! I look forward to watching your garden grow, PIP! 🙂

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  2. Not having a garden of my own yet it is lovely to see yours progressing through the year. We did buy four fruit bushes from Lidl this year to plant in pots. We have never grown fruit bushes before but they were very good value and are really coming on quickly. We bought raspberry, gooseberry, blackcurrant and redcurrant. The raspberry although green, lush and already flowering always looks like it is wilting. It is in a sheltered shadyish spot, maybe it needs more sun? I will experiment. 🙂

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  3. Pip, your peach tree has a fungal disease called peach leaf curl. It’s spread through the tree by rain dripping from one leaf to the next, so anytime you see leaves like these you should pluck them from the tree promptly, it can spread like wildfire if unchecked. Once the cool rainy spring weather has passed the disease will too, as long as you’ve kept on top of plucking affected leaves. It’s such a common disease where I live that we have to grow peaches sheltered from rain – my peach tree is espaliered on a sunny fence and my husband built a small ‘roof’ over the tree to shelter it.

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  4. Lovely to walk around your garden again. Have used the milk/water concoction with reasonable success. Our summer weather oft being very humid the fungus spreads as you watch! But those broad beans were still worth it. Becoming more ‘greenie’ by the day, was able to access some very attractive hanging contraptions with holes all around and am in the process of replanting all my strawberries into those and hanging them up where all my hanging flower baskets were under the back eaves! We’ll see . . . looking forwards to this month’s progress from you 🙂 !

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    1. Hi Eha, PAto, who I follow on facebook also uses these for his strawberries. They look excellent. I wonder if he will let me post one of his picutres to my blog? Thanks for stopping by, I’ve been in France and I’m way behind with my blogging 😦

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  5. Thanks for sharing the tip about the milk and water. We are planting zucchini plants in a few weeks along with cucumbers. We haven’t had an issue in the past but every year is different!

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  6. Meant to comment before on the use of manure, it’s supposed to be well rotted & in the case of horse manure that’s about 2 years in uk weather however manure will nearly always contain weed seeds. At our allotment we put the manure into hessian sack and then suspend in a tank of water, agitating every couple of days, after a week you will have a great liquid feed and no weed seeds! Avoid splashing foliage as it will leave marks.

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  7. Great to see you love gardening and your veg patch like I do! My passion is tomatoes. I used to have a seedbank of over 200 old and exotic tomatoes, but after the move I lost most of them. 😦 Still there are 8 wonderful varieties growing at the moment. Russians, Turkish, and an heirloom Pineapple among them.
    Lucy

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    1. Hi Lucy,
      Welcome to Piglet’s world 🙂 A fellow gardener — excellent. You must have been gutted when you lost some of your collection of seeds. So many different varieties. I confess this year I’m only growing cherry tomatoes.If I can keep them alive and well I will be happy. Tomato blight is my biggest problem

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  8. Great information for when I start my veg plot next year. I’m not very green fingered and have even nurtured weeds, thinking they were the seedlings which never did appear.

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    1. Hi alicia, neither am I very green fingered! It’s my enthusiasm and pig -headedness which drives me on 🙂 I once nurtured weeds a friend gave me once. She told me it wa French Tarragon. I even used it in cooking! I then looked around my garden and thought hang on…it was a pigging weed!

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  9. It sounds strange and looks weird (to borderline gross depending on how many slugs) but my mother put bowls with beer in them. The slugs were drawn to them like magnets and left the plants alone.

    Just thought I’d share my 2c. I’m VERY envious of your garden! We moved to a different apartment that gets. No. Sun. 😦

    Love the updates!

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    1. Hi Chris, I must try the beer trap. We went away for a fortnight to France during April, so the pellets were the easiest option to leave for the baby sitters. I really do need to buy some beer and do this, because it does work.

      Sorry to hear about your apartment’s lack of sun. I can’t imagine living without sun and my plants.

      Best
      PiP

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