I ventured to the plot just before Christmas to collect my veggies for the dinner table. It had been raining solidly for a couple of days and it wasn't the sort of weather I would normally expect to be digging in! See pictures below. The parsnips were hard to get out of the ground and needed a lot of mud washing off but they are in pretty good shape, tasty roots with only a small amount of canker affecting them. I would have expected more damage considering how wet it has been.
I also unearthed the baby carrots I planted in August (at Monty Don's suggestion on Gardener's World). These were not so successful, and had succumbed to quite a lot of wireworm (?) or maybe slug damage on the outer skins. There were enough carrots for a large meal, and a few did make it onto the dinner table, but the sheer amount of work involved in peeling and removing all the damaged flesh of such small carrots was so great I gave up in the end and used shop-bought veg for the sake of my sanity. My overall verdict on this late planting method is that the crop grew quite nicely, no doubt helped by the very warm weather in September, but the germination was very erratic and the crop quite small. Leaving the roots in the ground in such a wet year left them open to attack as I had feared, and I think they would need lifting a lot sooner in future to protect from damage. I think the latest planting time would be mid-July in future, with the aim of lifting in November instead of leaving them to their own devices.
|
Waterlogging on the plot. Brave daffodils shoots can just be seen in the water.
|
|
parsnips, and mud. lots of mud. |
|
Water cascading past the plot on the access road |
|
Overwintering onions seem to be doing well |
|
Some heartening evidence of garlic starting to sprout, but this was the only visible shoot. |
|
It was so wet, my footprints filled up with water after digging up the parsnips. |