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Look out the runner beans are coming!
On 2013-08-14 10:08:03 +0000, Martin said:
snip After all the articles about how bad things are for farmers because of climate change, there's a farmer in East Yorkshire expecting to get his record crop of barley in the Guinness Book of Records as a world record. Not sure what this has to do with the subject. And I read today that the cherry crop is terrific. There's a dwarf form planted in a Kent orchard yielding a terrific crop. The form is 'Gisela'. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon |
#2
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Look out the runner beans are coming!
sacha wrote:
And I read today that the cherry crop is terrific. I read that, then noticed the price of cherries on Ox.St go from 2.50/lb to 4/lb in a week. :-( |
#3
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Look out the runner beans are coming!
On 2013-08-14 22:04:00 +0100, Victoria Conlan said:
sacha wrote: And I read today that the cherry crop is terrific. I read that, then noticed the price of cherries on Ox.St go from 2.50/lb to 4/lb in a week. :-( Luckily, I only buy cherries for two of us. About 400g arrived yesterday. My personal fruit bat has cleared the lot. I had 3! I'd like to find some of those big white cherries so popular in France and so rarely seen here for some reason. Trip to Riverford Farm Shop tomorrow, I think and whatever they have, I'll be replenishing our stock. It's such a short season that it's worth making the most of it, imo. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
#4
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Look out the runner beans are coming!
On 2013-08-15 08:55:53 +0100, Martin said:
On 14 Aug 2013 21:04:00 GMT, Victoria Conlan wrote: sacha wrote: And I read today that the cherry crop is terrific. I read that, then noticed the price of cherries on Ox.St go from 2.50/lb to 4/lb in a week. :-( The same here. The source changed from imported to Dutch. http://www.finefoodspecialist.co.uk/...ies-1kg/1.html -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
#5
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Look out the runner beans are coming!
On 2013-08-15 10:07:33 +0100, Martin said:
On Thu, 15 Aug 2013 09:34:43 +0100, Sacha wrote: On 2013-08-15 08:55:53 +0100, Martin said: On 14 Aug 2013 21:04:00 GMT, Victoria Conlan wrote: sacha wrote: And I read today that the cherry crop is terrific. I read that, then noticed the price of cherries on Ox.St go from 2.50/lb to 4/lb in a week. :-( The same here. The source changed from imported to Dutch. http://www.finefoodspecialist.co.uk/...ies-1kg/1.html Blimey! Caviar with that?! -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
#6
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Look out the runner beans are coming!
Martin wrote:
I read that, then noticed the price of cherries on Ox.St go from 2.50/lb to 4/lb in a week. :-( The same here. The source changed from imported to Dutch. Heh, for a moment my brain went "hang on, Dutch /are/ imported!". Today I bought 1lb for 2.80, but that was Oop Norf. |
#7
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Look out the runner beans are coming!
"sacha" wrote ...
Martin said: snip After all the articles about how bad things are for farmers because of climate change, there's a farmer in East Yorkshire expecting to get his record crop of barley in the Guinness Book of Records as a world record. Not sure what this has to do with the subject. And I read today that the cherry crop is terrific. There's a dwarf form planted in a Kent orchard yielding a terrific crop. The form is 'Gisela'. Gisela 5 is the most dwarfing rootstock for cherries, all our four are on that rootstock. Strangely Brogdale didn't want us to have the tree we ordered from them on that rootstock, they said it was too dwarfing for the garden and best for container grown trees and I had to persuade them by saying I can't do ladders. All ours are doing very well, I've had to prune them quite hard this year to keep them within their cage and we got a reasonable crop (the second year for 2 and third year for 2). Blackfly on the new growth was a serious problem this year. -- Regards. Bob Hobden. Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK |
#8
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Look out the runner beans are coming!
On 2013-08-14 23:11:23 +0100, Bob Hobden said:
"sacha" wrote ... Martin said: snip After all the articles about how bad things are for farmers because of climate change, there's a farmer in East Yorkshire expecting to get his record crop of barley in the Guinness Book of Records as a world record. Not sure what this has to do with the subject. And I read today that the cherry crop is terrific. There's a dwarf form planted in a Kent orchard yielding a terrific crop. The form is 'Gisela'. Gisela 5 is the most dwarfing rootstock for cherries, all our four are on that rootstock. Strangely Brogdale didn't want us to have the tree we ordered from them on that rootstock, they said it was too dwarfing for the garden and best for container grown trees and I had to persuade them by saying I can't do ladders. All ours are doing very well, I've had to prune them quite hard this year to keep them within their cage and we got a reasonable crop (the second year for 2 and third year for 2). Blackfly on the new growth was a serious problem this year. The orchard I read about growing these watch the ripening like hawks and move cages over the trees at the appropriate time, so the cages must be quite a size, I'd think. I don't really understand that about it being too dwarfing for the garden. Do they mean it spreads more than it rises, if you see what I mean?! -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
#9
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Look out the runner beans are coming!
"Sacha" wrote ...
Bob Hobden said: "sacha" wrote ... Martin said: snip After all the articles about how bad things are for farmers because of climate change, there's a farmer in East Yorkshire expecting to get his record crop of barley in the Guinness Book of Records as a world record. Not sure what this has to do with the subject. And I read today that the cherry crop is terrific. There's a dwarf form planted in a Kent orchard yielding a terrific crop. The form is 'Gisela'. Gisela 5 is the most dwarfing rootstock for cherries, all our four are on that rootstock. Strangely Brogdale didn't want us to have the tree we ordered from them on that rootstock, they said it was too dwarfing for the garden and best for container grown trees and I had to persuade them by saying I can't do ladders. All ours are doing very well, I've had to prune them quite hard this year to keep them within their cage and we got a reasonable crop (the second year for 2 and third year for 2). Blackfly on the new growth was a serious problem this year. The orchard I read about growing these watch the ripening like hawks and move cages over the trees at the appropriate time, so the cages must be quite a size, I'd think. I don't really understand that about it being too dwarfing for the garden. Do they mean it spreads more than it rises, if you see what I mean?! It keeps the trees smaller in every way except the size of the fruit. So it makes it much easier to pick the crop, the trees can be closer together, and they are just easier to deal with, prune and spray etc. We have 4 under a 6 metre long cage. If you see an old sweet cherry tree they are huge, we had one down the road, unfortunately felled to make way for housing, but it was taller than a two storey house and roof. -- Regards. Bob Hobden. Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK |
#10
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Look out the runner beans are coming!
On 2013-08-15 16:51:53 +0100, Bob Hobden said:
"Sacha" wrote ... Bob Hobden said: "sacha" wrote ... Martin said: snip After all the articles about how bad things are for farmers because of climate change, there's a farmer in East Yorkshire expecting to get his record crop of barley in the Guinness Book of Records as a world record. Not sure what this has to do with the subject. And I read today that the cherry crop is terrific. There's a dwarf form planted in a Kent orchard yielding a terrific crop. The form is 'Gisela'. Gisela 5 is the most dwarfing rootstock for cherries, all our four are on that rootstock. Strangely Brogdale didn't want us to have the tree we ordered from them on that rootstock, they said it was too dwarfing for the garden and best for container grown trees and I had to persuade them by saying I can't do ladders. All ours are doing very well, I've had to prune them quite hard this year to keep them within their cage and we got a reasonable crop (the second year for 2 and third year for 2). Blackfly on the new growth was a serious problem this year. The orchard I read about growing these watch the ripening like hawks and move cages over the trees at the appropriate time, so the cages must be quite a size, I'd think. I don't really understand that about it being too dwarfing for the garden. Do they mean it spreads more than it rises, if you see what I mean?! It keeps the trees smaller in every way except the size of the fruit. So it makes it much easier to pick the crop, the trees can be closer together, and they are just easier to deal with, prune and spray etc. We have 4 under a 6 metre long cage. If you see an old sweet cherry tree they are huge, we had one down the road, unfortunately felled to make way for housing, but it was taller than a two storey house and roof. Yes indeed. All this makes me wonder why they tried to 'warn' you off them! I'll be telling the boss about these because I hope some time will be found this winter to build a fruit cage. We have to find a drier part of the field though, that's the problem. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
#11
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Look out the runner beans are coming!
"Sacha" wrote
Bob Hobden said: "Sacha" wrote ... Bob Hobden said: "sacha" wrote ... And I read today that the cherry crop is terrific. There's a dwarf form planted in a Kent orchard yielding a terrific crop. The form is 'Gisela'. Gisela 5 is the most dwarfing rootstock for cherries, all our four are on that rootstock. Strangely Brogdale didn't want us to have the tree we ordered from them on that rootstock, they said it was too dwarfing for the garden and best for container grown trees and I had to persuade them by saying I can't do ladders. All ours are doing very well, I've had to prune them quite hard this year to keep them within their cage and we got a reasonable crop (the second year for 2 and third year for 2). Blackfly on the new growth was a serious problem this year. The orchard I read about growing these watch the ripening like hawks and move cages over the trees at the appropriate time, so the cages must be quite a size, I'd think. I don't really understand that about it being too dwarfing for the garden. Do they mean it spreads more than it rises, if you see what I mean?! It keeps the trees smaller in every way except the size of the fruit. So it makes it much easier to pick the crop, the trees can be closer together, and they are just easier to deal with, prune and spray etc. We have 4 under a 6 metre long cage. If you see an old sweet cherry tree they are huge, we had one down the road, unfortunately felled to make way for housing, but it was taller than a two storey house and roof. Yes indeed. All this makes me wonder why they tried to 'warn' you off them! I'll be telling the boss about these because I hope some time will be found this winter to build a fruit cage. We have to find a drier part of the field though, that's the problem. If you intend to get some cherries on Gisela 5 rootstock then you need to chose the variety you want and then look for it on that rootstock, we ended up having to get our 4 from 3 different places. -- Regards. Bob Hobden. Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK |
#12
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Look out the runner beans are coming!
On 2013-08-15 22:52:05 +0100, Bob Hobden said:
"Sacha" wrote Bob Hobden said: "Sacha" wrote ... Bob Hobden said: "sacha" wrote ... And I read today that the cherry crop is terrific. There's a dwarf form planted in a Kent orchard yielding a terrific crop. The form is 'Gisela'. Gisela 5 is the most dwarfing rootstock for cherries, all our four are on that rootstock. Strangely Brogdale didn't want us to have the tree we ordered from them on that rootstock, they said it was too dwarfing for the garden and best for container grown trees and I had to persuade them by saying I can't do ladders. All ours are doing very well, I've had to prune them quite hard this year to keep them within their cage and we got a reasonable crop (the second year for 2 and third year for 2). Blackfly on the new growth was a serious problem this year. The orchard I read about growing these watch the ripening like hawks and move cages over the trees at the appropriate time, so the cages must be quite a size, I'd think. I don't really understand that about it being too dwarfing for the garden. Do they mean it spreads more than it rises, if you see what I mean?! It keeps the trees smaller in every way except the size of the fruit. So it makes it much easier to pick the crop, the trees can be closer together, and they are just easier to deal with, prune and spray etc. We have 4 under a 6 metre long cage. If you see an old sweet cherry tree they are huge, we had one down the road, unfortunately felled to make way for housing, but it was taller than a two storey house and roof. Yes indeed. All this makes me wonder why they tried to 'warn' you off them! I'll be telling the boss about these because I hope some time will be found this winter to build a fruit cage. We have to find a drier part of the field though, that's the problem. If you intend to get some cherries on Gisela 5 rootstock then you need to chose the variety you want and then look for it on that rootstock, we ended up having to get our 4 from 3 different places. I'm *hoping* to, but whether I'll succeed is another matter! Which did you get because you seem happy with them? -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
#13
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Look out the runner beans are coming!
On 15/08/2013 15:14, Sacha wrote:
On 2013-08-14 23:11:23 +0100, Bob Hobden said: "sacha" wrote ... Martin said: snip After all the articles about how bad things are for farmers because of climate change, there's a farmer in East Yorkshire expecting to get his record crop of barley in the Guinness Book of Records as a world record. Not sure what this has to do with the subject. And I read today that the cherry crop is terrific. There's a dwarf form planted in a Kent orchard yielding a terrific crop. The form is 'Gisela'. Gisela 5 is the most dwarfing rootstock for cherries, all our four are on that rootstock. Strangely Brogdale didn't want us to have the tree we ordered from them on that rootstock, they said it was too dwarfing for the garden and best for container grown trees and I had to persuade them by saying I can't do ladders. All ours are doing very well, I've had to prune them quite hard this year to keep them within their cage and we got a reasonable crop (the second year for 2 and third year for 2). Blackfly on the new growth was a serious problem this year. The orchard I read about growing these watch the ripening like hawks and move cages over the trees at the appropriate time, so the cages must be quite a size, I'd think. I don't really understand that about it being too dwarfing for the garden. Do they mean it spreads more than it rises, if you see what I mean?! They showed them the other week being grown in poly tunnels |
#14
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Look out the runner beans are coming!
On 2013-08-15 17:33:48 +0100, David Hill said:
On 15/08/2013 15:14, Sacha wrote: On 2013-08-14 23:11:23 +0100, Bob Hobden said: "sacha" wrote ... Martin said: snip After all the articles about how bad things are for farmers because of climate change, there's a farmer in East Yorkshire expecting to get his record crop of barley in the Guinness Book of Records as a world record. Not sure what this has to do with the subject. And I read today that the cherry crop is terrific. There's a dwarf form planted in a Kent orchard yielding a terrific crop. The form is 'Gisela'. Gisela 5 is the most dwarfing rootstock for cherries, all our four are on that rootstock. Strangely Brogdale didn't want us to have the tree we ordered from them on that rootstock, they said it was too dwarfing for the garden and best for container grown trees and I had to persuade them by saying I can't do ladders. All ours are doing very well, I've had to prune them quite hard this year to keep them within their cage and we got a reasonable crop (the second year for 2 and third year for 2). Blackfly on the new growth was a serious problem this year. The orchard I read about growing these watch the ripening like hawks and move cages over the trees at the appropriate time, so the cages must be quite a size, I'd think. I don't really understand that about it being too dwarfing for the garden. Do they mean it spreads more than it rises, if you see what I mean?! They showed them the other week being grown in poly tunnels I can see Ray's face now! ;-) -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
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