I was recently given a packet of potato fertiliser so yesterday I hoed the potato patch, scattered some granules over the area then watered.
This week I’ve also finished weeding the main flower patch, mostly pulling out unwanted collomia grandiflora seedlings but leaving a good size clump.
The wavy grass path edge was completely unintentional.
The other plants I left were some Forget-me-nots at the top of the patch by the roadway. It’s only in the past couple of years that these have started appearing on the plot. Since I’ve not sown any seeds they must have been airborne from plants on nearby plots. I’m happy to see them and hope that they’ll freely self-seed.

The clocks change at the weekend and the forecast is looking dry, sunny and warm into next week so I’m looking forward to starting to plant out the onions and potatoes, along with sowing some of the annual flower seeds.
Have a good weekend and take care!
I’ve decided to leave the sedums alone and not dig them up, split and replant.

There are various single white cosmos varieties and I grow one of the dwarf ones. This year I’ve bought a couple of packets of the less well known Royal Dwarf White, which only grows to around 18 in/ 45 cm, from
I mentioned the sunflowers MusicBox in the 
The bright green area are self-seeded poached egg plants (limnanthes douglasii) which should provide a yellow carpet of flowers in a few months time. There are far too many self-seeded collomia grandiflora seedlings this year, some which I’ll transplant and pull the rest up.
I like blackberries so when I took the plot on I kept one bramble bush, which is out of the way alongside the compost heap. On Friday I cut out all the dead wood, which is one of the few plot jobs I do wearing heavy duty gloves as being a wild bramble it’s covered in thorns. I also lightly prune it as and when required through the season to keep it from straying onto the two adjacent grass paths. The ground around and under the bush is where I put any compost I dig out and sieve I don’t I don’t use elsewhere straight away.
Come July I’ll be picking plenty of ripe juicy berries to take home. I usually eat them with just a sprinkling of demerara sugar, and occasionally some vanilla ice cream. One of my favourite puddings was always apple and blackberry crumble, which mum used to make regularly. The picture shows a dishful picked in July 2011.
Among the weeds I noticed two small plants – an English Daisy and a Forget-me-not – both of which I carefully dug up and took home. I’ve replanted them in 2 in/ 5 cm pots and put them on the windowsill. If they do okay and start to grow I’ll repot them in larger pots in a few weeks time.
Out front at home one of the yellow roses I’ve mentioned and shown recently is still blooming. Also starting to flower is the Vinca/ Periwinkle which grows behind this rose against the wall, and I’ll take a photo once the flowers become more visible.
I was intending to give both roses a major prune over the winter but will leave that for another year as I’ve got plenty of other things to do in the next few weeks, such as finishing digging out the compost heap. The archive picture shows the rose Pretty Lady in full bloom in June 2021.
