Saturday 27 April 2024

Hairy and special

Hi

Looking forward to the spring, patience is a virtue and all that. Still managing to fill the days very productively, it's steady but without those WOW weeks so far. Gilets, vests and coats are still order of the day although at least the rain has eased for a few days. Potting is rolling along as we keep the nursery topped up awaiting that burst of activity yet to appear. What we could really do with is a dollop of sunshine, I don't mind the cool but it has been so dull.

In the end it is probably just as well we aren't overrun, as the long term van invalid is still absent with no indication when it might return and another has been diagnosed with needing a replacement air suspension compressor. Not only is it a bit pricey but it isn't available for 2 or 3 weeks. It is currently now on light duties to keep it doing something. I always thought it would be a shortage of drivers that would mess up peak deliveries but we have plenty of them, just nothing to put them in. The worlds mission to scupper our attempts to run a marginally efficient nursery has added an extra complication with a lengthy delay on the delivery of our next container of coir pots. They usually come through the Suez canal and that stretch of water below it, where all the attacks on shipping have been happening. Consequently they have been diverted around the bottom of Africa which, due to the extra distance and general disruption to the shipping, has added weeks to the delivery date and a lot in extra costs. Luckily we always try to keep at least a containers worth in stock just in case of this sort of issue and if all goes to plan we should just about run out on the latest estimated delivery date. The little village production unit in Sri Lanka that makes our pots is ramping up production so they can send out future deliveries earlier while this situation continues, which is very understanding of them and we are very grateful for the efforts they go to for us.

Despatch this week has been full of fledgling robins hopping about and demanding attention from the parents. They are really sweet and a bit too distracting to maintain mega efficiency levels, but it did make everyone feel good which is great. We see a lot of amphibians on site, nothing very rare although a very healthy helpful population. but we rarely see a reptile. Last weekend Greg came rushing in with a bucket containing a medium sized slowworm he caught in the garden while doing his first mow of the season. He needed to move it safely out of the way, hence the bucket, but to be honest it was so lively I suspect it would have been fine. He saw one last year too, but his garden is a lot drier than the nursery and probably has a better habitat for that kind of thing as we have never seen one actually on our site. It just seemed so exotic.

Other recent wildlife appearances have been a bit less welcome with a massive amount of pigeon and rabbit damage. Our rabbit control has slipped a little and they are now well into the breeding season so they are all over the place, digging stuff up and chomping through their favourites. Most of the stock will grow back given a chance and we are hoping our favourite dispatcher will do his stuff this weekend and give us a fighting chance.

A reminder this week that a kind word can go a long way. I was at a brilliant dance freestyle at the Winchester Guildhall, where the done thing is to dance with lots of different partners, making the evening fun for all. For most of us chaps with a limited memory for moves (me), it means we avoid boring one partner by repeating the same thing over and again all evening, instead just dancing one or two songs which each. For the ladies it makes for a much more varied evening as each chap will have a different set of moves so they get masses of variety. We all have those partners we know we combine well with so we watch out for each other, but I do try and avoid dancing with them if they have just finished a turn with teacher Danny who is just from another dance planet. I collected one lady late in the evening and I mentioned that I didn't want Danny to have raised expectations before a turn round the floor with me, so I had delayed our dance. She said not to worry as I was a 'special' dancer, and there conversation finished as I can't talk and remember my moves at the same time! I have laughed to myself for weeks after, working out the different meanings that may have meant by that word 'special'.

Anyway keep up the good work out there, all you special plants people!

Availability list.

Scabiosa Flutter White and Flutter Rose Pink are budding well with the odd splash of colour too. Disappearing fast. Camassia Alba and the blue flowering Maybelle are both showing multiple buds. Maybelle is particularly good. Allium Cristophii and Purple Sensation are budding, but not many left now.

The scrambling Campanula posharskyana is chunky and now producing plenty of bud. Intense blue flowers on Lithodora Compact Blue are now opening. Phlox subulata varieites are producing bud and colour, a great early performer in a nice range of colours.

Multiple Hosta varieties are bursting through, with One Man's Treasure looking really smart with deep green leaves and very dark stems. All propagated in our own micro-prop lab, we have a great selection. Summer stars the Agapanthus are now making strong growth after their winter dormancy period. Lapis Lazuli is already producing buds.

Best wishes from all at Kirton Farm Nurseries.

Saturday 20 April 2024

Hairy Wildlife

Hi 

Bit busier this week on the sales front with the drier brighter weather helping footfall I suspect. Still a definate nip in the air athe moment and the forecast is for more cool and dry to come over the next few days. Nice to see the back of most of the rain, although it has just started here again, perfect timing as the Autoglass vans have just pulled in to replace one of the van screens! Plants are growing well at the moment so most of them are getting stuck into spring activities, let's hope the gardeners are going to do the same.

Potting continues at full pace after we take another walking lorry load full of peat-free potting compost this week. If only therwere more days in the week and we could catch up a bit further, although slower sales this year is restricting available production space so perhaps it's about right really. It's difficult to walk past the modules being held and not wish we had them in a pot already, but hey-ho it is what it is.

More van fun this week, the Fiat is still missing, not sure what month that will be back, another went in for a brake warning light telling us the pads needed to be replaced and the issue turned out to be a broken sensor wire. Frustrating but a cheap repair! Big van windscreen cracked hence today's Autoglass visit, and now another is going in today with and an intermittent air suspension issue, so hoping that isn't away too long or we will be pushing the trolleys to their destinations next week. Hedgehogs are back in the garden and birds are singing and nesting all over the place. There is a robins nest in the irrigation control box, reused from last year and now with four youngsters in residence being looked after by a couple of now rather bedraggled parents, or ragged robins as a horticulturist may say.

Wind turbines have done really well this year so far, in fact April has already generated as much as estimated for the whole month, which will be a nice bonus in a few months when we get paid for the exported power. Our small solar planning application is in, although not yet official, as they clear up a few site details before making it fully public. Fingers crossed it does ruffle too many feathers locally, although to be fair it is barely visible from any direction unless you are airborne and even then it's not very big.

Just as I thought we were seeing spaces develop in the prop tunnel as we ran the potting machine at full tilt, another two plant deliveries came in with some lovely looking stock. So tempting to run them straight round to the machine but just had to put them down and continue potting the older material. A week or two on the ground before potting does toughen them up quite a bit compared to when they first arrive, so when they go out into our very open tunnels after potting, they are ready for some tougher growing conditions. Some things are better when old and tough, especially nurserymen..

Availability list.

Scabiosa Flutter White and Flutter Rose Pink are budding well with the odd splash of colour tooCamassia Alba and the blue flowering Maybelle are both showing multiple buds. Maybelle is particularly good. The excellent newcomer Allium Ostara is up and looking particularly smart with buds just appearing in the leaf bases although not many left..

Allium Cristophii has just started budding, they are tight down among the leaves at the moment but a little more warmth and sunshine and they will be awayThe ever popular Allium Purple Sensation is showing well and buds have just started to appear. The scrambling Campanula posharskyana is chunky and now producing plenty of bud. Intense blue flowers on Lithodora Compact Blue are now opening.

Phlox subulata varieites are producing bud and colour, a great early performer in a nice range of colours.The bronzed green ferny leaves of Polemonium Heaven Scent look well and pale blue flower buds are now opening. A fresh tight batch that we gave the Chelsea chop a few weeks ago have now shot back and are doing well.

Multiple Hosta varieties are bursting through, with One Man's Treasure looking really smart with deep green leaves and verdark stems. All propagated in our own micro-prop lab, we have a great selection. Summer stars the Agapanthus are now making strong growth after their winter dormancy period. Lapis Lazuli is already producing buds. Like the Hostas they are all propagated in our microprop lab and have overwintered well. We don't often have very many, but we have made a bigger effort with them over the last year so we can get them as far as a hairy pot rather than selling them all to other growers!

Lavender Munstead are looking fab with early bud now showing above a fresh tight flush of foliage. Sometimes I get a bit jealous of the advanced growth achieved under frost-free glass or those imports from a warmer climate, but just at the moment I don't think you could wish for a better Lavender Munstead crop than the one we have on the nursery

Best wishes from all at Kirton Farm Nurseries.