Tuesday was another gloomy day in what seems like an endless stream of cold gloomy days. The weather has put allotment activities on hold. I've rather unknowingly slipped into winter mode where visits to the plot are only made to see what’s available for harvesting.
We had a day out to Carlisle by train on Saturday travelling north along the East Coast Main Line to Durham before turning and heading west to Carlisle.
The train was a special charter train hauled to York by diesel. For the remainder of the journey it was steam hauled by 60009 Union of South Africa.
Both locomotives are pictured at Carlisle station where the weather was bright and sunny but cold. As we sped north, I just managed a few pictures, taken through the train windows, of the flooded fields and snowy conditions It was a bit of a task to keep the window clear of condensation and there was plenty of steam and smoke from our locomotive.
At last the gloomy weather came to an end on Friday and at times we saw some rather pale wintry sun. It’s the first time in four days that the cloud has lifted enough to allow some sunshine to break through. The penalty was much cooler weather with the temperature remaining in single figures despite the sunshine.
In the afternoon I took our part-time dog (she’s a dog all of the time just part-time with us) for a walk in the park at Rothwell. At times the wind was bitter but some of the trees in the pale sunlight looked spectacular in their autumn colours.
We've eaten the Brown Turkey figs picked yesterday. They were a little too small to be able to sample the taste properly. They certainly looked like miniature figs when prepared, I’m not sure what else I expected them to look like. They appeared quite delicate once cut in half to reveal the lovely colour inside.
Our fig tree already has its next crop of smallish figs but I’m not too sure that we’ll be able to get them through the winter in our cold greenhouse. Some layers of fleece might do the trick if we’re lucky and the winter turns out to be fairly mild.
The miserable gloomy weather has persisted through Wednesday and Thursday again without any hint of brightness. Thursday has been a little brighter and the sunshine or rather brightness chart below shows the only reason I’m reporting this.
As you can see Thursday has been marginally brighter but compared with the rest of the month it could be so much better.
We made the effort to protect the roots of our potted outdoor fruit trees and moved our osteospermums and hydrangea into the cold greenhouse in readiness for a cold spell due to arrive on Friday night. We had five small figs on our Brown Turkey plant in the greenhouse. They don’t seem to have grown much all summer but they looked a little purplish on the outside and felt a bit soft so I decided to pick them and see how they tasted. All five weighed in at just 75 gms.
The gloom continued on Tuesday. I suppose the only good point is that it’s not been too cold with the temperature varying by only 1.8°C through the day with a maximum of 12.7°C.
Our yellow rose is still producing new buds despite being rather neglected. It had a bad start to the year when it was hacked back to ground level and its roots partially encased in the concrete foundations to the new summerhouse. Its gone on to regrow and is now better than it has ever been producing lots of flowers all summer.
Even though an old mouldy flower has been left on (too wet to dead-head) it’s still producing new flower buds even in this damp and miserable weather.
It really did feel like late October on Monday with damp, drizzly and cloudy conditions all day without the briefest hint of any sunshine. It does look like things are going to change by the weekend with much colder clearer weather spreading from the north.
This is one scenario for early Friday night as the cold weather sinks south from Scotland. Of course the timing is bound to change before the weekend. It might be a case of our first keen frost of winter so any plants needing protection will have to moved into the greenhouse. Our tubs of osteospermums will need to be given some protection as we are experimenting to see if we can over winter the plants in the greenhouse. This way we hope to get them into flower earlier next year. Our potted hydrangea will also be moved into the protection of the cold greenhouse.
I’m sure I heard mention of an Indian Summer on the TV weather forecast last week. Well I suppose they got the month correct but other than that not much sign of it arriving yet.
Sunday started out sunny but by midday the mist came in and remained all day. It remained cool all day with the temperature only reaching a maximum of 10.6°C certainly nothing "Indian Summer" about that.
Whilst sorting out some records I noticed that the mean temperatures for 2012 are already lower than last year and they’re only going to go lower during November and December. For the records here are the numbers.
The gloomy weather hasn’t stopped this Kaffir Lily from putting on a display in our puddle pond.
This blog records the local weather details near to my allotment plot in Wakefield. The details are gathered from a weather station which I set up in my garden during October 2009. Click here to read about set up.
Records of temperature, rainfall and wind speeds will be posted as recorded. A summary is posted each month on our website click here to view.
Click any chart image to view at 100%. Click on the magnifying glass to magnify and use the mouse to move the image.
Spa day
-
Meteorological autumn began last Monday, although it seems that autumn
started a few weeks ago.
The ground is already littered with fallen leaves.
Astrol...
Videos relocated
-
Our videos have been relocated here
*Copyright: Original post from Two Gardeners - One Video Diary
http://gardeningvideodiary.blogspot.co.uk/ autho...
60103 Flying Scotsman with The Yorkshireman
-
It's a long time since we've been out capturing any steam on the main line
and we were definitely out of practice.
>
Copyright: Original post from ht...
2025 Welcome
-
2025 kicked off with Storm Eowyn. Edinburgh Botanic Gardens lost their
tallest tree. Across town our allotment site we also experienced a bit of a
bl...
Season's greetings
-
A line or two to say hello and wish you the very best the season has to
offer. Are we all well? I do hope so.
I have been working hard here, nose t...
April hedgehog visitors & videos
-
April 2022 has been, to date, THE best hedgehog watching via the garden
cameras in all my time blogging! What a very special gardenwatching month
this ha...
Solstice Blessings, Happy New Year
-
Despite the doom, gloom, mess and chaos caused by upright bipeds, The Wheel
continues to turn and once again we reach Winter Solstice. Blessings to you
all...
70013 Oliver Cromwell - Photo review
-
As National Railway Museum owned 70013 approaches the end of its current
boiler certificate and as we celebrate fifty years since the last steam
working on...
Spring In Progress
-
It was time! The two raised beds, where we overwinter or start our early
crops, were rotting. Seven years..who would have thought they would last
that lo...
Apple Harvesting
-
It's almost apple harvesting time, and this is a very exciting year for me! I
have a bumper crop of 43 apples!
Six years ago I bought a self pollinating ...
Colour In December
-
In 2013, I followed the late Geoff Hamilton's advice, visiting a nursery or
garden centre each month of the year and purchasing a plant which was in
flower...
Brassicas, Sun & Raspberries.
-
It’s been great having a bit of time off work especially that the weather
has been so kind to me, I was able to get down the plot a fair bit.[image:
IMG_...
Mal's Allotment has moved...
-
... to http://malsedallotment.blogspot.co.uk/
Mal's Edinburgh Allotment
This blog is now an archive.
Hope to see you at the new site.
Thanks to all cont...