Hope you are all enjoying the very good weather we are having this fine June. Here are some things to do in the community garden this June,enjoy.
Regards
Willie
Community
Garden & Vegetable Gardening in June
We're also moving towards the longest
day, June 21st being the summer solstice so there is plenty of daylight to let
you get on with things.
There is a lot to do in June but the
rewards for our efforts are coming in the harvest.
Harvest
Salad crops should be available,
lettuce, spring onion, radish etc., summer cabbage and early carrots. With
carrots the later thinning’s can provide a great addition to a salad or just
steamed with a cooked meal.
The early potatoes will be coming in
this month. Because your potatoes will be going from ground to pan in a matter
of minutes you will discover a truly wonderful flavour.
Beetroot, young turnips and summer
spinach may all be welcome fresh additions to your diet.
The early peas could well be cropping in June,
especially in the south
Sowing, Planting and Cultivating
Cultivating
As with May, we really need to keep on
top of the weeds. Hoeing them off as small seedlings will make the job far
easier than waiting for them to grow and send their roots down. Hoeing is best
done on a dry day so that the weeds do not have a chance to recover. Don't
forget to sharpen your hoe before you start and frequently as you use it.
Keeping a small sharpening stone or file in your pocket will make this more
convenient.
Continue thinning out your carrots,
parsnips, beetroot etc. As I said above, later carrot thinning’s can provide a
tender and tasty addition to a meal.
Water when required. Your best
measuring instrument for water is your finger. If the top of the soil looks
dry, insert your finger into the soil. If it's dry at the tip, then you need to
water.
Don't just sprinkle a few drops on the
surface, it probably won't penetrate and do any good. Far better to give a good
soaking less frequently that will get to the roots of your crops.
In very dry weather, keeping the surface friable by
hoeing will help keep the water from getting to the surface by capillary action
and then evaporating away. It also helps water soak in when you do get some
rain.
Planting
You should be able to plant out
brassicas now. Broccoli and calabrese, Brussels sprouts, summer cabbage.
If you have started beans in pots, both
runner and French these can go into the outside too. Leeks may well be ready to
move to their final position. Ideally they want to be about pencil thickness.
Don't follow the old guidance to trim the leaves and roots when transplanting
leeks. It has been proven to be of no benefit and is counter-productive. Celery
can go out now as well.
Outdoor tomatoes can go to their final
position now. When moving plants from greenhouse to outdoors it is a good idea
to condition them to the move. Take them out in the day and put them back at
night for a few days or move from greenhouse to coldframe. This avoids shocking
the plant by a sudden and drastic change in climate.
Sowing
There is a lot to sow this month and
with many crops you can sow one set and then a few weeks later re-sow to give
you a succession of fresh vegetables at the peak of perfection. In dry weather
it is a good idea to soak your seed drill before sowing and then just water
with a fine rose after.
- French and Runner Beans Maincrop peas Beetroot Carrots Turnips Swedes Cauliflowers Chicory Endive Kohlrabi Sweetcorn Squash Courgette and Marrows Cucucumber
Beetroot, French beans, carrots,
kohlrabi, peas, lettuce, endive, radish should be sown at intervals throughout
the summer months to provide a constant supply Successional sowing ensures you
always have fresh crops at the peak for your table.
In the greenhouse
Keep pinching off the side shoots with
your tomatoes and keep an eye out for pests such as aphids, whitefly, red
spider mite. If you are subject to attack by these pests it is worth checking out
biological controls as these are perfectly safe to use and, used correctly,
more effective than traditional chemical controls. Many of the chemical
controls of the past are no longer available anyway so the organic alternatives
are now the mainstream choice.
Fruit
Make sure your fruiting plants have
sufficient water when the fruit is swelling. This is critical to a good crop.
Thin out plums and apples in June.
Better to have one reasonable apple than three miniature marbles. Nature
naturally tends towards this and sheds excess fruit. This is known as the 'June
Drop'. It's best to thin out after this.
In the greenhouse
Keep
pinching off the side shoots with your tomatoes and keep an eye out for pests
such as aphids, whitefly, red spider mite. If you are subject to attack by
these pests it is worth checking out biological controls as these are perfectly
safe to use and, used correctly, more effective than traditional chemical
controls. Many of the chemical controls of the past are no longer available
anyway so the organic alternatives are now the mainstream choice.
Fruit
Make
sure your fruiting plants have sufficient water when the fruit is swelling.
This is critical to a good crop.
Thin
out plums and apples in June. Better to have one reasonable apple than three
miniature marbles. Nature naturally tends towards this and sheds excess fruit.
This is known as the 'June Drop'. It's best to thin out after this.
General Tasks
The
infantry of slugs and snails are attacking at ground level so take action to
keep them down and the air force of birds are coming from the skies to eat your
crops. Don't forget the netting.
The
butterflies are about now as well. Beautiful as they are, check the undersides
of your brassica leaves for the yellow or white eggs that will hatch into
caterpillars and devastate the plant. You can squash them, wipe or wash them
off easily at this stage.
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