| #512 |
Productive day today at the plot (as my lower back acknowledges). 
There were eight seeds in my giant sunflower packet so I found four six inch pots, tipped out some old tomato compost and filled each pot.Gave them all a good watering to soak the compost then planted one seed in each. I cut two plastic bottles in half and used each half to put over where the seed was sown to keep the critters off them. They are now on the greenhouse staging along witt four of my newly potted Astrolomeia (Peruvian lillies) which are in much bigger pots. They are under an area where a glass pane is missing so protected from wind, but able to be watered by rain.
I then second hoed a swath in my flower beds and formed a groove with the hoe to beef up the plants that were already there with two boxes of varying flower seeds. After covering up the seed I decided to plant the other four pumpkin seeds direct in one of the rows spaced out accordingly. To keep the meeces and slugs off then I then put four glass tubes over them. These tubes are about eighteen inches tall so I stuck a cane in each in case the wind decided to blow them over?
I then hand weeded the two flower beds taking out what i new to be weeds (This is where the aching back came from as with having shorts on, I couldn't kneal to do it so it was a bendy over job!)
To finish off, and I thought maybe to release my back a bit, I decided to dig over my longest diagonal bed. I just left it rough dug and will form a seed bed when I am next there and decide what I will sow into it. Possibilities are swedes, PSB or the mixed pumpkin seeds I have just ordered? The rest of the plot was looking reasonably tidy and the bit of fertiliser I added to the onion beds seems to have perked them up a bit.

There were eight seeds in my giant sunflower packet so I found four six inch pots, tipped out some old tomato compost and filled each pot.Gave them all a good watering to soak the compost then planted one seed in each. I cut two plastic bottles in half and used each half to put over where the seed was sown to keep the critters off them. They are now on the greenhouse staging along witt four of my newly potted Astrolomeia (Peruvian lillies) which are in much bigger pots. They are under an area where a glass pane is missing so protected from wind, but able to be watered by rain.

I then second hoed a swath in my flower beds and formed a groove with the hoe to beef up the plants that were already there with two boxes of varying flower seeds. After covering up the seed I decided to plant the other four pumpkin seeds direct in one of the rows spaced out accordingly. To keep the meeces and slugs off then I then put four glass tubes over them. These tubes are about eighteen inches tall so I stuck a cane in each in case the wind decided to blow them over?
I then hand weeded the two flower beds taking out what i new to be weeds (This is where the aching back came from as with having shorts on, I couldn't kneal to do it so it was a bendy over job!)
To finish off, and I thought maybe to release my back a bit, I decided to dig over my longest diagonal bed. I just left it rough dug and will form a seed bed when I am next there and decide what I will sow into it. Possibilities are swedes, PSB or the mixed pumpkin seeds I have just ordered? The rest of the plot was looking reasonably tidy and the bit of fertiliser I added to the onion beds seems to have perked them up a bit.
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