Thursday 30 July 2009

Dealing with the Garden

River and Hills

Courgettes or Zucchini


Although I grow a lot of fruit in the garden, I thought I'd ty a few vegetables this year. Courgettes, Tomatoes and Peppers. We are currently inundated with courgettes and are struggling to eat as many as are produced! It's time to search out some innovative recipes. The tomatoes are growing strongly, but as yet the fruit is still small. The Pepper plants are still quite small, but I'm hopeful that they will produce.

Of course I missed the major flower display in the garden over June and July and the garden looks a bit tired and washed out right now. I missed the prusion of poppies in the wild garden/orchard and also missed the large cottage flowers in action; the Lupins, Foxgloves, Delphiniums and Gladioli.

Naturally I had a huge amount of weeding to do on my return but thankfully the wild orchard idea had grown so dense that hardly any nasty perennial weeds had got established. The sandy soil also means its very easy to them out. after a weeks work it's looking quite tidy now. The worst part was getting up-to-date with the dead-heading of flowers.

The new fruit trees are looking healthy and the new apples have a smattering of fruit. The two crab-apples have a lot of fruit but I've lost the top of one in a high wind. Amazingly the new Peach tree has recovered from the Peach Curl disease it had in the Spring and is acually producing two fruits. Whether or not these ripen we will see. All the other trees I treated for Peach Curl seem to be fine too. I must remember to apply the treatment again this winter.

Also for the first time the Walnut tree has a couple of fruit which are ripening. It has started fruit in the past but always lost them. So maybe this is th start of an annual walnut crop.

The Vosges


On waking in fine sunshine on our second day in the Vosges I found Paul already up and about. he claimed to have slept reasonable comfortably though his sleeping-bag is very thin.

house_20090716_D_047548_st4

After packing our gear we set off in the direction of the Ferme-Auberge where we had the beers yesterday and arrived there after edging past a herd of cows at the farm gate. We had fantasised last night and this morning about a ample german style breakfast of sausages and eggs etc and were a little disappointed to discover that they only served a continental breakfast of bread and jam.

We made do and made the best of it by sitting outside in the sun.

We then too the trail out to the Steinberg ridge. This was to finally reconnoiter the Tour route although we had, by then, more or less agreed that we would see the Tour at the Col du Firstplan which was to be the final climb of that stage.

house_20090716_D_047558_st5b

The walk out to Steinberg was very pleasant as we again walked through flowery meadows which we just alive with butterflies. I once again stopped to get plenty of photographs. At the end of the ridge we scrambled onto some rocks - almost Tors - to get a better view, but didn't stay long as they were covered in flying ants!

house_20090716_D_047563_st4

We returned along the trail in the direction of Petit Ballon and met a family gathering flower blooms in the meadow. They were in fact collecting mille feuille - and thousand leaves - for making into a tisane! She also mentioned collecting the wild pansies in the field too. We'd already noticed how this varied in colour from patch to patch; white, yellow, cream, pale violet and purple as well as the familiar tri-colour versions.

Instead of climbing up to Petit Ballon again and taking the GR%£@ down again we decided to skirt the peak by taking the small lane around the hill and re-joining the trail further down.

It turned out to be a very pleasant stroll in the sunshine and we passed one Ferme-Auberge where we decided it was probably too early for a beer before stumbling upon a second one further down the hill. I suggested that though it was still early we should consider having a decent meal now as it was unlike that we would have anything tonight or tomorrow when we would be beside the road from the Tour.

Paul agreed and we sat down to a meal. As expected the portions where gigantic and we were almost full after the first course. We had taken the Randonneurs Menu of course! After taking our time over the meal and having had two pints we finally staggered out of the place and rolled down the hill to Firstplan.

The trail took us down and down, first along a lane and then through some woods - which we noticed were full of raspberries - until it popped out on a small lane leading to the Firstplan junction. Quite a lot of Camper Vans were set up along the both the lane and the main road. We quickly discoved a Dutch group who had set up a TV with Satellite link and were watching the current stage of the Tour. We squatted in the warm grass and watched with them.

When the stage had finished we crossed the road and found a picnic table which we commandeered. We would sleep nearby this evening. After reading for a bit we walked around to inspect all the other groups that were about. some of these people had been camped here for four days to ensure a spot. We walked up and down the lane. As we watched several new arrivals tried to squeeze but they where usually moved on by the police who periodically came by.

In the evening we went back up the lane we had arrived on and got talking to the last camper. They were locals from just outside Colmar and we spent a very pleasurable hour of so talking and drinking Pinot Noir which they generously shared with us. As it became dark we wandered back to our sleeping spot and tried to crash out. A group of boisterous Norwegians had arrived and were noisilly proceeding to party.

No comments:

Post a Comment