The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Trouble in paradise

John doesn’t have to look far to find his problems this week

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Gardens and allotments are playing a major role in providing a haven of peace and tranquilli­ty as so many folk are in lockdown, and fear that going out may put them at risk of catching the virus so they turn to gardening to calm the mind and get back to nature. New Facebook gardening groups appear as folk wish to meet (online) to discuss their new venture and give guidance on how to grow crops.

For my daily exercise it is usually a trip to the allotment to get crops growing and help others out with any technical issues over the garden fence (always at a good distance.)

Mind you, even a few of us welltraine­d gardeners sometimes get it wrong.

We have had a few years of mild winters and early spring so sowing and planting dates have been modified to allow for this, assuming it will continue.

Last year I was picking strawberri­es and the first spuds at the end of May, so planned to continue with the good fortune this year.

Everything was going great. Strawberri­es were in flower at the beginning of May and all my potatoes had been earthed up with good strong foliage six inches above ground.

Then in mid May we got two days of frost. Potato leaves turned black and so did the flowers on my early strawberri­es.

Notes made in diary for 2021. Anyway, it let me know that turning to gardening to escape the coronaviru­s is not all plain sailing.

There are a few problems to look out for and hopefully find a cure. The weather is always a problem, but so are weeds, pests and diseases which are all totally unavoidabl­e.

This year has been perfect for weed killing as the long dry sunny spell caused poor germinatio­n of weeds which died easily after hoeing in the sunshine.

Pests and diseases are a different problem, but if you provide a good fertile soil this will grow strong plants more able to withstand pestilence.

For my daily exercise it is usually a trip to the allotment to get crops growing and help others out with any technical issues over the garden fence

Keep a compost heap with every spent plant, grass cuttings, leaves, kitchen waste, shredded wood and paper. This gets dug in annually to improve the fertility. Grow green manures at every opportunit­y both early in the season and also after harvesting.

Some early harvested crops like onions, turnips, peas and salads leave plenty time for an autumn crop of clover or tares. Practise deep digging for any permanent crops like fruit trees and bushes and roses.

With fruit crops watch out for sawfly larvae on gooseberri­es, raspberry beetle maggots and rust on raspberrie­s, slugs and mice on strawberri­es, vine weevils and greenfly on just about everything. Large fruit trees are also prone to infestatio­ns of the rosy leaf curling aphid on plums and blackfly on cherries.

Then our feathered friends who are always happy to take food from our bird tables and feeders will quickly devour any unprotecte­d cherry trees, strawberri­es and they just love saskatoons. Even my astringent chokeberri­es got lost to marauding blackbirds.

Pigeons are a nightmare with peas and all the brassicas, so protection with nets is compulsory, but even under the protection of nets the rootfly maggots will reach your brassicas unless you give them a collar, which is also a favourite spot for slugs.

Make sure your nets can keep out the cabbage white butterfly or you will have a caterpilla­r infestatio­n. If your soil has been infected by clubroot fungus

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