Heading into the vegetable garden on a September morning, you can feel the approaching autumn with all of your senses. A gentle mist greets the rising sun. All around there is a busy urgency as the wild creatures prepare to leave for warmer shores, or build up their stores for the winter. The fragrance of autumn is on the air: clear, cold, crisp.
This is an incredibly busy time; I am also storing for the months ahead. It’s hard work, but there is much satisfaction in preserving, drying, bottling, curing and freezing home-grown and foraged produce. Much of the soft fruit is weighed, bagged and labelled, then frozen for jam making in the winter when things are quieter. The fragrance of bubbling fruit in the kitchen on a dark January day is gorgeous.
In the poly-tunnel, I am gradually clearing summer crops as they finish, and planting or sowing salads, herbs, brassicas, carrots, spring onions and Florence fennel.
This gives the plants time to establish before the days become very short and cool, and will provide harvests right through until May next year.
ENCOURAGING WILDLIFE
Working with nature is a key part of my growing, so I make sure that some of my home-grown harvests are left for wildlife to eat and store, and I make plenty of cosy places for them to hibernate in. This makes sure that the biodiversity of my garden is secure, and that the beneficial predators which help to keep everything in balance here will survive the winter.
Denne historien er fra September 2021-utgaven av Kitchen Garden.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent ? Logg på
Denne historien er fra September 2021-utgaven av Kitchen Garden.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
SEPTEMBER SPECIALS
This month, with sweetcorn, figs and blackberries on the menu, Anna Cairns Pettigrew is not only serving up something sweet and something savoury, but all things scrumptious
FLAVOURSOME FRUIT AUTUMN RASPBERRIES
September - is it late summer or the start of autumn? David Patch ponders the question and says whatever the season, it's time to harvest autumn raspberries
SOW GREEN THIS AUTUMN
Covering the soil with a green manure in winter offers many benefits and this is a good time to sow hardy types, says KG editor Steve Ott
A HISTORICAL HAVEN OF FRUIT AND FLOWERS
KG's Martin Fish takes time out from his own plot to visit a walled garden in Lincolnshire which has been home to the same family for more than 400 years
RESTORING THE BALANCE
The phrase regenerative gardening is often heard in gardening circles, but what is it? Can it help you to grow better veg? Ecologist Becky Searle thinks so, and tells us why
WASTE NOT, WANT NOT
Garden Organic's Anton Rosenfeld shares his expertise on using compost made from green bin collections with handy tips on getting the right consistency and quality
Celebrating Organic September!
In this special section we bring you four great features aimed at improving your crops and allowing nature to thrive
SEEING RED
Do your tomatoes have a habit of remaining stubbornly green? Or perhaps you're lucky to enjoy lots of lovely fruits - just all at once. Either way, Benedict Vanheems is here with some top tips to ripen and process the nation's favourite summer staple
NEW KIDS ON THE BROCCOLI!
Rob Smith is talking broccoli this month with a review of the different types available and suggestions for some exciting new varieties to try
A NEW kitchen garden
Martin Fish is getting down to plenty of picking and planting on the garden veg plot, while Jill is rustling up something pepper-licking good!