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Planning for the garden in 2024

Tis the season to be jolly and all that , and tis also the season to begin planning for the garden in 2024. I have been thumbing through the seed catalogues, a pastime almost as dangerous as Christmas shopping . I always s eem to find something that I had never heard of , but now knowing of its existence , simply now must have! Rarely does a year pass that I am not growing a vegetable or flower completely new to me; for me it is one of the great pleasures of gardening, there is always something new to grow.    I have been busy clearing the ve g beds removing the remnants of the Butternut Squash plants and Runner Beans to be composted and digging out the inevitable Dandelions , trying to get the entire tap root out as I do so. I will be adding quite a bit of compost and manure to the beds over the winter so having cleared and slightly dug over the bed where I grew outdoor Tomatoes this year, I have placed tarpaulin over this bed for now to keep weed seeds out . I will add the

Preparing the garden for winter and next year

Perhaps it is because I garden and as such become more attuned to the seasons, but I quite enjoy the onset of autumn. The shorter days, the s oftening light, the changes in the garden and the world around us as everything prepares for winter; there is a certain beauty to it. That said, there is plenty to be getting on with readying the garden for the weeks ahead and into next year.    The English Lavender has already been pruned back with the flowers now finished meaning the Miscanthus Indian Summer grasses are now the highlight of that bed. The plan for this bed was for the bronze stems and feathery seedheads of the grass to sit beautifully behind the green/silver foliage of the mounded Lavender plants and it is working I am happy to report and thus far the grasses are withstanding the battering they have received from all the recent wind and rain. It has to be said, though we haven't had it as bad as some parts of the country, the garden as a whole has withstood the storms pr

Dealing with the harvest from the vegetable patch and preparing plants for next year

  As I write this article in early September, I am sitting in the garden in thirty-degree heat ; what a crazy summer of weather we have had this year. Most of my time of late has been taken up with the harvest o n the vegetable patch. At least twice a week I am blanching and freezing Runner Beans and the bottom tr a y of my freezer is already full. They are a great vegetable to have on your patch and I would encourage everyone to grow them as they will supply you with bean s throughout the summer and into autumn with plenty over to freeze ready for roast dinner s through the winter months. The Tomatoes have been cropping like crazy and when not dealing with the beans I have been bus y making Tomato Ketchup and BBQ Sauce. The Buffalo Steak tomato plants r emain ladened and t he re’ll be a few more hours spent making sauce before the season is over .    My recipe for Tomato Ketchup is pretty standard though I have tweaked it a little down the years; if you are interested it ca