Tuesday 28 February 2017

BLOSSOM TIME IN CENTRAL PORTUGAL

28th FEBRUARY 2017 – CENTRAL PORTUGAL.

It’s Blossom time in the Beiras. The last couple of warm and sunny weeks encouraged the Apricot, Peach, Almond and Plum trees into their glorious spring finery. The spectacular displays never cease to amaze and the vibrant colours in deep pink, gentle peach and vanilla ice creams transform the forest of plain brown, seemingly lifeless sticks, into the wonderland of nature’s awakening Spring Fantasy.

The miniature Nectarine tree 

Full size Nectarine tree in full bloom

The large Damascus Apricot awaiting pollination!


Even after seventy plus gardening years it always stirs the horticultural heart into action for new triumphs in the seasons to come. A small problem that seems to be exasperated more each year is the lack of insects to fertilise this grand overture to the growing year. Bees seem to be in very short supply and most other Flying Lotharios are still at home, presumably awaiting higher night temperatures, even though the very warm days (over 20 degrees) should kick start their appetites for fresh pollen supplies.

The young purple plum

Just a little blossom on the almond tree this year

What the plants, trees and garden in general now need is a good feed and a lot of tender loving care. The liberal application of the Blue Balls, or if you are a ‘Tree Hugger’, lots of natural manure, topped off with a generous mulch of last year’s compost will ensure everything gets a good start in the growing stakes. Remove all damaged and dead wood from everything (use sharp Secateurs as blunt instruments squash the cut ends and allow the ingress of lots of ‘nasties’ into the stalk or branch), trim for shape (no this not a spring prune) as nothing looks worse than a lop-side bush or tree and ensure the ‘leaders’(those long whips that grow directly towards the stars) are removed to keep cropping trees within ‘fruit picking’ height.

Soft fruit is desperate for a little attention, Raspberries and Loganberries need the old fruiting canes removed and the new fruiting shoots given space to grow and breath. Strawberries should have been serviced before the January frosts , for those tardy few, it is about time the plants were cleaned of runners (which, as they will be mainly rooted can be planted for new stock), weeded and aerated.  Ease a small fork around the plant and loosen the compacted earth around the roots,  then feed and top off with fresh compost.

Seed planting is now very tempting, but not directly into uncovered ground as the still latent cold will delay germination and may well rot the seed. For those with Poly Tunnels, big Cloches and Green House - what are you waiting for? Just get on with it and stop making excuses.

Cut back last year’s Chilli and Sweet Pepper plants to within 150mm of the soil and await the first shoots and you should see flower in six weeks and chills in twelve weeks. Check all last autumn’s cuttings for growth. 

Brugmansia, Hydrangea, Fuchsia, Ivy Leafed Geraniums should be showing some life.  Geraniums now need water (no feed yet and then only sparingly if flowers are required). Cuttings from most trees such as Fig, Apple, Catalpa, Olive and Chestnut will be showing plump buds at the growing tip. Don’t be tempted to move - just leave for another three months before transplanting in to separate pots.

Last year's geranium cuttings springing forth

Here come the Hydrangeas

Roses are ready for their second Feed. The recent sunny days have encouraged masses of new growth which will translate into abundant flowering by May on the HT(Hybrid Tea) roses, and into masses of bloom on the ‘Specie’ rambling roses. By late March earl April, stand back and enjoy the King of the Garden in its full regal splendour.

Looks like a good year for Wisteria. There are lots of buds on the numerous growing tips and the white and purple Solanum are puckering up for their usual summer long show. Easter Lilies are serene even though its only Shrove Tuesday.

Wisteria is full of fat buds
The first of the lovely Easter Lilies


For the productive gardener, get your vines pruned NOW or it will be too late. Potatoes should be in by now (ok, the frost of January and rain of early February can be your excuse) and most cabbages can still be cropped - if getting a little tough. Broad beans should be ready in a two to three weeks if planted back in November. ( Ah! you forgot, pity!)

So easy to become verbose at this wonderfully emergent time of  year. Must curb enthusiasm as they Head Gardener’s list is getting ever longer and the time for the life preserving coffee will become ever diminished.

Now there goes the ‘Bell’ that cheers

must dash,

see you soon  


Stuart.

Thursday 16 February 2017

SPRINGTIME WORK BEGINS

16TH FEBRUARY 2017 – CENTRAL PORTUGAL.

The first stirrings of spring could be felt this morning on the Belvedere. After six weeks of very cold and lately, very wet weather, there was a gentle, almost warm zephyr playing across the tree tops in the valley. Tulips are well up and buds are ‘plumptious’ on the fruit trees in the orchard. The unusually cold temperatures, accompanied by sharp frost in January, have held back the early blossoms on the Damascus apricot and almond trees, so there may be a chance that the glorious and colourful show of flowers, now expected in February, will be fallen upon with gusto and fertilised by the awakening bees.  

Hoping for blossom like this again this spring
After two extremely poor fruit seasons, due to early flowering and little fertilisation, among all the fruit varieties, a bumper crop will be most welcome in the coming months. The deluge of the last couple of weeks has done little to alleviate the water shortage. There has been little consistent precipitation since last May, so most wells are very low and the reservoirs are almost empty. Maybe this is a good time to start planning for a minimum water requirement planting strategy? Last year the use of tubs and ‘lagoon’ beds reduced the water consumption by around 40%. Careful conservation measures could possibly improve on this figure by a further 25%. (That’s 50% of usual, not 65% reduction).

The enormous olive groves in the Alentejo are fully irrigated, delivering around one litre per tree per day.  With this in mind, it must be possible to minimise the daily watering of tubs and pots in the garden. The use of hose pipes always exacerbates the problem, as water delivery is so easy. Using a watering can of known capacity allows a degree of control (the carrying effort from the tap also persuades the delivery to be on the parsimonious side of excess).

So, the lazy days of winter are over, planning complete. Now is the time for action. Digging, fertilising, hoeing the seed beds and planting. Covering the ground with ‘cloches’ or black plastic sheeting will quickly dissipate the insipient cold in the soil. A few days of sunshine will increase the surface temperature under the covers by a least 10degrees and, with the day time temperatures now reaching around 15degrees, most seeds will start to stir.

The cut back Chilli plants are ready to be fed and mulched (most varieties of Chilli produce better crops in their second and third year so should not be treated as an annual and grown from seed each year, also brings the crop forward by six weeks).
Piri piri plant, just before the onset of winter - should be reviving again very soon

Still far too early for tomatoes, aubergines but sweet peppers can be dealt with in the same manner as the Chilli plants. Leeks, if not overwintered, can be planted now, together with the early crop of potatoes and broad beans. Portuguese used to plant their broad beans in November for a late February early march crop, but with the recent few years of adverse weather conditions in the Beiras,  they tend to wait until the middle of February. For those with greenhouses or other protection against the cold nights, most of those annual seeds can now be sown. If not successful, there is plenty of time to try again and if it works, the seedlings will have a head start.

All the fruit trees and shrubs need attention now. Remove all damaged growth back to a viable bud, fork around the trunk or stem, apply your choice of feed and mulch. To prolong its benefit to the plant, remember more mature trees should have the feed distributed in a circle approximately one metre from the trunk for the most effective results.

There are lovely - and some unexpected - spring flowers around in the flower garden.

A few precious snowdrops - not usually grown in this part of the world

A beautiful shy Hellibore

Mini cyclamen in a shady pot

Totally out of season nasturtum!


So enjoy the stunning Spring mornings. Is there anything better than a lung full of sparkling fresh air just after dawn? This, followed mid morning by the Head Gardeners coffee, makes life complete as the new growing year progresses.

 Talking of coffee, there goes the bell,

 must dash,

see you soon,


Stuart.