Monday 29 September 2014

Hairy cover up

Good morning all.

Sun is still out but the house martins have flown south now for their winter break. Looking forward to mine with a long weekend booked on Tresco. Or was that Tesco. Times are still tough.
Still have some winter interest stock, including lovely Asters and Hellebores, scooting off to new homes but the impending cash-flow lull is looming and it’s nearly time to batten down the hatches until sales start to pick up again in the New Year. Lots of winter projects pencilled in but all on a tight budget so lots of recycling and imagination on the cards.
One big change this winter will be the new colour perennial labels threaded on their bamboo skewers. The specially designed skewers are due in during October and the printers are busy preparing the set up for the bespoke coloured part. We have managed, ahead of schedule, to gather together the final list of plants for them to print and generated individual barcodes and QR codes for all varieties. So well done us! Now we just need to generate about 450 pages of plant info on the web pages so the QR codes actually show something when they come into use in the New Year.
We are hoping to develop a bit more water collection from some of the tunnels, but it’s a tricky thing to balance with the price of water still being fairly cheap and the water recycling installations not. I’m sure we’ll come up with something.The cash-flow took a bit of a beating this week with a couple of those sneaky bills coming in that you hope not to get. The routine checks on the forklift showed a worn bearing, no longer a standard available part of course, and they have had to take the truck away, more cost, to get done as they couldn’t get the pins out on site. Then the propagation area environmental control computer needed repair after it stopped holding on to all its settings when the power went off. One of those specialist bits of kit that needed the maker to come out and deal with. Just £8 for the replacement backup battery but £400 for labour and travel costs. The battery was a soldering job so I would have struggled to do it myself and the engineer did do several other checks of the attached kit and resetting of data but still a bit of a bitter pill.
What did go brilliantly this week was the recovering of 3 tunnels which got damaged and temporarily repaired after last winter’s storms. I ordered 7 sheets late the previous week which arrived very promptly, thanks to Fargro & XL Horticulture. We then had one very still day on which we covered two and a short window the following morning when we slipped over another. The second day was touch and go as the wind picked up as soon as we got the sheet over. It can get pretty tense when that happens, as a sheet 50m x 11.1m with the wind under it is a very powerful thing. However in favourable conditions, once the cover is over, it only takes 4 of us about an hour or so to fix it down but as so often it’s the preparation and tidying up t hat takes most time. The warmth in the air meant all three are on nice and tight and I am hoping we get another couple of warm still days in the coming week when we can get the rest done. That would be quite a relief going into the winter.

Availability

Fresh stock is growing well and the range is picking up again for the autumn surge!
Asters are showing bud and flower and looking great. Particularly good are Rosenwitchel, Starlight, Lady in Blue & Snowsprite. Hellebourus are just starting to come ready with a few new additions to the range. We are trying a new H. orientalis selection called Crown Dark Purple which is reported to flower after its first winter, it is certainly coming on nicely at the moment. We have a few H. niger Praecox to try out and three great new H. viridus varieties which are looking very smart and distinctly different from each other. ‘Silver & Rose’ has attractive silvered foliage, ‘White Green’ has deep green leaves with strong cream veining, and ‘Rose Green’ has a more glaucous green leaf with pretty flush of pink in the stems and some leaf veining. Nice short varieties looking enthusiastic in their pots.
Flowers showing on the Erodium Bishops form which never seems to stop once it starts. Evergreen Bergenia’s are now making a tidy pot ready to produce their early spring colours. Ajuga’s looking smart, nice pot full’s of coloured foliage.

Another winter interest group are the Pulmonaria’s. We have extended the range this winter with the white edged leaves of David Ward (pink flowers) and the pretty white spring flowers of Sissinghusrt White held above white spotted leaves. The regular stunners are still there, Blue Ensign (pale leaves but the best blue flowers) and the fabulously variegated/white blotched leaves of Opal with its lovely delightful pale blue flower in spring.

Wooden Box Collections
We have had a really good round up of trays over the last couple of weeks but if anyone still has any of our wooden boxes ready for collection please do drop us an email and we will pop in and retrieve them. We can then prepare ourselves for some winter whittling and repairs. Thanks.

Have a good one, from all at Kirton Farm Nurseries

Monday 22 September 2014

Hairy and Ancient

Good morning all

Last gasp of summer weather lingers on, along with a few House Martins that are still flying around the house.
Next spring’s Erysimum’s got potted this week and they are looking really strong. The policy of slipping the little modules into a larger one for a few weeks certainly seems to be paying off at the moment. Let’s hope the winter isn’t too harsh and the buds appear nice and early again to get those early sales going. We always grow them hard to get a really strong plant and give them plenty of room by double spacing them from the start. They seem to respond well and always look great among the other early starters. The early bulbs are sat waiting to grow away as well, out of reach of the mice in their pots on trolleys until they start shooting. It certainly fooled the little tykes last year and hopefully will again.

We watched the second of the BBC2 Stonehenge programmes last week which, like the first, was a bit hit and miss. The overall impression of a big, complex and important landscape rather than simply a circle of stones was great and something not always appreciated by the casual visitor. Just a bit disappointing was the lack of detail again and a few rather odd distractions. The oddest divulgence was the story behind the little gold studs found back in the 19th century in one of the nearby Bronze-age barrows. They found 140,000 tiny studs (1mm x 0.2mm) originally fitted into a dagger handle. This was slightly old news but still an astonishing find. They then seemed to suggest they had been made by cutting ultra thin shavings of gold twisted together by children (good eye sight) and all based on the experience of a modern artist who made miniature jewellery under a microscope. On screen, even to a pleb like me, it looked a dubious theory but as soon as the programme finished I had an irate call from our tame arcaeologist Brian who was, in a previous life, a research fellow metallurgist. Apparently you make studs like this from ‘drawing out’ metal from a fatter piece, a bit like making Blackpool rock with the lettering in the middle. Still a skilled job but relatively simple. Apparently you can even see the striations on the studs where it was pulled through a sizing hole. I know there is quite a bit of fanciful thinking in archaeology already, but at least it is usually built on using the evidence in front of them. Come on BBC we’d like to believe what you tell us in a documentary.My archaeological education took another step forward this week with the suggestion that the three broken bits of iron pyrite nodules I pulled out of the base of a small pit dissected by a trench on the farm, could be a deliberate deposit and may have been used as part of a fire-lighting kit in ancient times. This kit is now rusting on the kitchen table while I think of a good home for it. Caroline got the star find in the trench with a possible worked piece of slate. For the first time I have reported the finds to the local Portable Antiquities lady, on Brian’s advice, and sent a couple of images so they can at least identify the finds and record the locations for their records, if they so desire. Images below, just in case you are as sad as me.




A week of learning new stuff was unfortunately brought to a close on Friday with the demise of one of our local Sparrowhawks. We found a bird in very poor health, managed to pick it up, cage it and drop it off at the brilliant local Hawk Conservancy near Andover where they have a bird hospital as well as a fantastic venue for showing off birds of prey. We had assumed injury by a car or similar as its beak area was a bit messy but it turned out to be an infection called Frounce which can be picked up from pigeons and finches. It affects the throat area and can kill in just a few days. If the bird is ill enough to get caught then it is often too far gone for treatment as was the case with our bird. Still, we had a go and the hospital was pleased with the donation we made.

Availability

Fresh stock is growing well and the range is picking up again for the autumn surge!
Asters are showing bud and flower and looking great. Particularly good are Rosenwitchel, Starlight, Lady in Blue and Snowsprite.
Hellebourus are just starting to come ready with a few new additions to the range. We are trying a new H. orientalis selection called Crown Dark Purple which is reported to flower after its first winter, it is certainly coming on nicely at the moment. We have a few H. niger Praecox to try out and three great new H. viridus varieties which are looking very smart and distinctly different from each other. ‘Silver and Rose’ has attractive silvered foliage, ‘White Green’ has deep green leaves with strong cream veining, and ‘Rose Green’ has a more glaucous green leaf with pretty flush of pink in the stems and some leaf veining. Nice short varieties looking enthusiastic in their pots.
Flowers showing on the Erodium Bishops form which never seems to stop once it starts.

Wooden Box Collections

If anyone has any of our wooden boxes ready for collection please do drop us an email and we will pop in and retrieve them over the next few weeks. We can then prepare ourselves for some winter whittling and repairs. Thanks.

Have a good one, from all at Kirton Farm Nurseries

Monday 15 September 2014

Shallow and Hairy

Morning All,

Another very pleasant week’s weather and next week looks ok too. Still warm but possible damp later. At least the breeze has picked up a bit, those turbines have been a bit too stationary for my liking over the last couple of weeks. A nice gentle breeze is all I ask and that meter ticks over very nicely.

My 5 days of driver training is complete and my faith in humanity restored after a much more encouraging last day. We did nutrition and stress on the last day. Just got started on the nutrition part as the burger van pulled in to the training yard car park at 9.00 and we all had a break dashed out and refueled! I took a purely observational role. Our last batch of predators were released this week and our third late summer/autumn packets of mixed nematodes are in the fridge awaiting application. I’m sure there will be the odd vine weevil that eludes them but we have seen a really big reduction in adults spotted around the nursery this summer with hardly any damage or adults seen at all. Last winter’s mild temperatures could have easily seen a population explosion with the adults overwintering well and starting egg laying early as well as it being a good winter for larvae survival, all potentially swelling the summer populations. The combination of efficient and multiple applications (6 in total this year) seems to be a much more effective strategy than the fungal spores previously used. Now we have fined tuned the process over this year, next year’s control could be really effective with low over wintered populations and well timed controls. One crop that is very attractive to the vine weevil is strawberry’s and I am told there are fruit growers who are now applying lower levels of mixed nematodes throughout the summer to cover the whole weevil egg laying period so perhaps this might be another strategy worth taking a look at. Things never stand still.Nice to see the BBC catching up with the latest Stonehenge stuff this week (another programme on next week). Bit disappointed with the lack of specific information, too much wishy washy CGI stone-age hunting and riding over fields on buggies with electric kit on for my liking, but it did give a nice glimpse of the larger Stonehenge landscape. ‘My’ Blick Mead Spring site just outside Amesbury got a nice spot with the archaeologist showing the meseolithic layers in the soil and the magenta coloured flint (rare algae taint from one of the springs). But lots of really important info was either not given or edited out for the sake of entertainment, I felt it missed out on an opportunity to get some more in-depth info out there so we can try and understand things better ourselves rather than just be jollied along through the evening. Perhaps indicative of a general assumption that we need short little nuggets of excitement to keep us interested but best not to let us know too much. After a bit it all gets a bit shallow and boring doesn’t it? A bit like instant gardening perhaps, only buying things in bud and flower rather limits the experience. Quick get me an expensive caffeine drink and a slab of cake before I get bored.

Availability
Fresh stock is growing well and the range is picking up again for the autumn surge!
Asters just beginning to show bud and the first occasional flower and looking great. Showing colour particularly well are Rosenwitchel, Starlight, Lady in Blue and Snowsprite.
Helenium’s seem to be the in plant at the moment, featuring a lot in the papers and on the telly over the last couple of weeks.We have a few varieties at the moment growing away nicely.
Hellebourus are just starting to come ready with a few new additions to the range. We are trying a new H. orientalis selection called Crown Dark Purple which is reported to flower after its first winter, it is certainly coming on nicely at the moment. We have a few H. niger Praecox to try out and three great new H. viridus varieties which are looking very smart and distinctly different from each other. ‘Silver & Rose’ has attractive silvered foliage, ‘White Green’ has deep green leaves with strong cream veining, and ‘Rose Green’ has a more glaucous green leaf with pretty flush of pink in the stems and some leaf veining. Nice short varieties looking enthusiastic in their pots.

Wooden Box Collections
If anyone has any of our wooden boxes ready for collection please do drop us an email and we will pop in and retrieve them over the next few weeks. We can then prepare ourselves for some winter whittling and repairs. Thanks.

Have a good one, from all at Kirton Farm Nurseries

Monday 8 September 2014

To all you lovely Hairy people

Good morning all.
A nice bit of steady weather to get a few more plants sold and get a strong spurt of growth on the new potting getting them well prepared for the early spring sales bonanza. There are a few more new varieties again for the new season which always fills me with hope for exciting sales uptakes and by then we will have our new labels too which should give a real boost to the presentation of the plants.
It still surprises me that after 30 years we find new things each season to take things on to another level, and these labels with their incorporated bamboo skewers should be another leap forward in presentation and practicality for everyone. We have even managed to get sheets of matching blanks labels made so we can print our own near identical extras where needed. Although the costs look very competitive to the bog standard label offering, I am getting slightly nervous about the little extras I have added like individual variety barcodes and the QR codes that will be on the label backs. We are going to have to create a lot of specific on-line info this winter to back it all up as well as changing all the nursery software and paperwork to ensure things run nice and smoothly for everyone. Luckily I don’t get out much so I can devote all those long dark evenings to cussing at computers and their programs which means all that extra development is free. It’s always good to remember your own value.
Quiet weekend after the excitement of Crawleyfest last Saturday. It did turn out to be a fairly exclusive event with a sell out 500 pre-booked £5 ticket, so a good showing and hopefully they made a nice lot of money for the cricket team. Unfortunately due perhaps to not moving in the right circles we got left off the invitation list hence not knowing anything about it until the organiser popped in to collect his plant donation the day before. We did pop in during the afternoon to make further donations to the bar and ace cake van but missed out on the bands. The master stroke of the event was the beer tent, I can definitely recommend a pint or two of a local brew to make a fete pass very pleasantly.
Only one more day of driver CPC training to go. Had a rubbish session this week, learnt nothing and got pretty disillusioned with the outside world after two ‘over enthusiastic’ truckers dominated the day. A display of all the worst aspects of a ‘male’ trucker you could imagine, and some I couldn’t, all put on show. It was a case of heads down to get through the day and qualify as being trained, without saying anything that might mean getting hit or ridiculed. Difficult to believe there was a trainer present. There was no physical threat on the day but the content indicated it was part of their life along with a lot of other nasty stuff. It does make you appreciate what you have at home and at work when you get out, which is a sort of positive outcome!
Well done all you lovely people out there, we will win out in the end, keep it up.

Availability
Fresh stock is growing well and the range is picking up again for the autumn surge!
Asters just beginning to show bud and the first occasional flower and looking great. Helenium’s seem to be the 'in' plant at the moment, featuring a lot in the papers and on the telly over the last couple of weeks.
We have a few varieties at the moment growing away nicely. Hellebourus are just starting to come ready with a few new additions to the range. We are trying a new H. orientalis selection called Crown Dark Purple which is reported to flower after its first winter, it is certainly coming on nicely at the moment. We
have a few H. niger Praecox to try out and three great new H. viridus varieties which are looking very smart and distinctly different from each other. ‘Silver & Rose’ has attractive silvered foliage, ‘White Green’ has deep green leaves with strong cream veining, and ‘Rose Green’ has a more glaucous green leaf with pretty flush of pink in the stems and some leaf veining. Nice short varieties looking enthusiastic in their pots.
We have a great range of good looking very chunky Agapanthus we are producing for the first time this summer.

Wooden Box Collections
If anyone has any of our wooden boxes ready for collection please do drop us an email and we will pop in and retrieve them over the next few weeks. We can then prepare ourselves for some winter whittling and repairs. Thanks.

Have a good one, from all at Kirton Farm Nurseries

Monday 1 September 2014

Hairy Pizza lithics

Good morning all.

4 days in a week is just not enough. Caroline and I lost another day on top of the bank holiday with another driving training day and the rest of the week seemed to fill up with all sorts of extras. Somehow we managed to arrange the van service, forklift truck service, 3 wind turbine services and an acid dosing fitting all in a few days. Life is just so exciting!

The bank holiday weekend went by in a rush, all the hopeful plans to cut up a load of wood for the winter wood store in all that extra available time went completely out the window, following all the catching up of jobs on the nursery and the washout that was Monday. Still at least I got the first of the 3 autumn doses of nematodes applied over the whole nursery. The next lot are already here waiting in the fridge for application next week, autumn must be coming up fast.

Our Sunday excursion the previous weekend to Stonehenge was brilliant. Expertly led by Brian our tame archaeologist who provided flint samples, a folder of images of the recent excavations around the sites and a constant narrative helping illustrate the 6 hour walk. We had our alfresco picnic sitting at the top of The Avenue right by the stones but outside the rather nasty builders fence, while hundreds of tourists trooped round the stones themselves on the other side. I had the privilege of being able to cut up my cold slice of pizza with a broken flint blade we had rescued from a molehill deposit on the way up The Avenue processional route. That was probably the first pizza that blade had cut up for over 5,000 years. Since our last big walk there 2½years ago English Heritage have done a brilliant job illustrating what was going on all those years ago by providing themed information boards all around the wider area of the Stonehenge landscape so you no longer really need an experts guidance to get a great feel for the area. Well worth a day out. Check out the National Trust Stonehenge info for several walks.
www.nationaltrust.org.uk/stonehenge-landscape/things-to-see-and-do/

We popped into the new visitors centre just to check it out. Very nice, although as we weren’t going to the stones we didn’t need to pay so didn’t get to see the inside exhibition. Understandably all a bit new but seemed to cater nicely for the quick stop tourists, big car park, cafe, gift shop with a good range from specialist book selections to the Stonehenge snow-globes and nice eco friendly loos. A vast improvement on the previous centre. Nice demo of reconstructed Neolithic huts to see, based on the designs unearthed at Durrington Walls a few years ago (starting point of our walk).

Local village inaugural ‘festival’ today (‘Crawleyfest’), donated some stock to the plant stall so ought to pop along to show support. Not quite sure what to expect, stalls etc during the day and some music in the evening, food and drink on tap and the weather looks ok. Hope it’s more organised than the website and advertising. It could be they are after a more exclusive audience. Despite that, I am still going.

Availability

We have a slight lull in flowering stock at the moment after strong summer sales. Fresh stock is g rowing well and the range is picking up again for the autumn surge!
Asters just beginning to show bud and the first occasional flower and looking fresh and yummy.
We have a great range of good looking chunky Agapanthus we are producing for the first time this summer.

Wooden Box Collections

If anyone has any of our wooden boxes ready for collection please do drop us an email and we will pop in and retrieve them over the next few weeks. We can then prepare ourselves for some winter whittling and repairs. Thanks.

Have a good one, from all at Kirton Farm Nurseries