What, sunshine in April? Never

It’s like this every year, you’re waiting for spring to happen and then next thing you’ve got a load of plants to harden off (above). We’ve got some giant sunflowers that are over a foot high now and tomatoes, sweet peas and some chillies we were given over the weekend alongside the geranium cuttings from Honor Oak Park station. It’s only just turned April too!

Also, in the bed down the bottom we started lots of seeds off. The rocket can be seen taking off underneath small branches used to keep the cats and foxes off. The seeds were only put in the other day, or it seemed like it! Hope all goes well on the sowing front your side and the nice weather keeps on keeping on. Keep checking those last frosts dates and do remember nature plays by its own rules sometimes.

 

Tree surgeons know where to cut a tree, arborists know why

We were listening to The Rhythm Doctor’s Waiting Room yesterday on IDA Radio, Tallinn here and alongside some great music as usual there were a couple of tracks with a connection to the great Junior Vasquez played.

The Rhythm Doc mentioned that he actually visited the Sound Factory and even went into the legendary DJ booth come studio/kitchen/living room/potting shed etc (we tried to replicate said booth at one of our Steroid Abuse nights many moons ago but failed.)

What is brilliant is we have now (thanks to RD’s research) tracked down Junior’s new career and it looks like he’s a tree surgeon. We also saw on the small print (below) that “If it’s not on the list just ask we might do it” whish looks like he may have changed his policy when it came to playing requests. “Can you play one for my Aunty Maureen who’s in hospital with an ingrowing toenail. We hope she gets better soon”.

There’s a good chance it may be a namesake but we hope not! Imagine the stories he could tell you while he’s having a tea break.

More radio connections

Big thanks to Kit G0JPS for sending these two radio related tracks. The first is (Paul Thorpe, recording as) Voodoo Trombone Quartet with a track called Medium Wave. Great fun stuff.

 

The next is (Paul Thorpe again under the moniker) Braces Tower with a shipping forecast tune called The General Synopsys.

That’s what is great about music, you think you know a bit and then you realise, “The more you know, the more you realize you don’t know” as the saying goes. Cheers Kit, two great tunes and we will do further research on Paul Thorpe as he sounds like an interesting fellow.

Radio connects us all, yet again

Big thanks to Kit (G0JPS) for getting in touch recently and for sending us a picture of a couple of plants he rescued from a skip outside a house round the corner. We love the great poster of the shipping areas (as featured on the shipping forecast. More on The Shipping Forecast and its connection with Reggae here) behind it. As you all know we love a skip here as well and to find plants in one, even better! They look well healthy.

Kit also makes some great D’n’B, techno tinged, breaky type stuff as Spherix (bandcamp here) and a couple include a some radio samples in them too which is brilliant to hear.

Great to connect with you Kit and look forward to more music and gardening type photographs.

Add some compost, it works!

Pic – Compost in a compost heap.
If you remember, we started some seeds off in some peat-free compost a while ago, they hung around for a couple of weeks and just withered away. Alan got in touch with us here at the time and mentioned he had the same problem so started mixing garden compost in with the peat-free stuff.
We’ve just heard from Alan again on how his seeds are going this year and it looks like the mixing of a small amount of home-made garden compost is working well. “Last year I had pretty poor germination despite soaking seeds and providing warmth as usual. This year the outcome so far has been night and day different” Here’s the rundown on how it’s going (bold is this year’s results).

“I wanted at least one aubergine plant – last year got none from my first
batch of seeds. Planted 3 seeds, 3 plants. Chillis – wanted one plant. 3 seeds, 3 plants (both pics above).

Cucumbers (above) – couldn’t get anything from seed last year so had to buy a plant
from the local nursery (it died, so bought another). Planted 5 seeds hoping
for 1 plant – 5 plants. Have one or two to give away to my daughter.

Tomatoes (above) – never normally a problem and again very good results, near 100%
germination.

Onions (above) very good results with near 100% germination (Weeds note: That is brilliant Alan, we’ve never done onions from seed before we don’t think or they’ve never been successful if we have).

Sweet peas – very poor last year with maybe 10% germination. This year about 50% germination. All are growing well and I water once a week. They’ll go into the polytunnel soon. The sweet peas (above) are only a small sample of what I have grown. The pots had 3 – 4 seeds each pot so one plant each is not too bad.

In terms of the process I don’t think I’ve done anything very different this year so I do suspect that the better moisture retention in the compost has helped germination by keeping the seeds moist while producing critical early roots. So as far as I am concerned I will stick to my mix – next up are my peas. Broad beans did well and they are in the ground now.”

Brilliant Alan, that is so good to hear.  Your seedlings are looking great and we reckon that tip of adding the home-made compost works. We noticed the same here compared to last year as well. We only added a smallish amount but it makes a difference. Cheers again Alan and do send us more pictures on how they do in the garden!

Not waterloo Sunset

Cheers to Rich R in the Lake District for the latest picture from there of a lovely sunset from the other evening, it don’t half look glorious. We even love the way the sun is shining off the barbed wire.

And cheers to Rich also for a pic from last night of ELO Musk’s rocket taking what is called a fuel dump. As it reported on the BBC website “… told the BBC that as he was taking out his bins in Suffolk he saw a “huge catherine wheel which appeared to have its own atmosphere around it”. We’re taking out our bins at Weeds HQ in a minute and hope we don’t see anything like that in the sky here in SE23. Cheers again Rich!

It’s time to choose your handle and pick up your microphone Part 2

And talking of CB in the last post, here’s some Citizen Band related tunes. The first is a funky/disco number from the island of Jamaica. It’s from Bobby T & The Citizen’s Band (Third World we reckon as it is near enough “Everything is great”) called 40 channels to play. There’s even some shortwave tuning sounds and even a callsign thrown in, “U54 or UW4 (?) Kingston, Jamaica, West Indies”. This is probably the only time CQ DX is ever mentioned on a Jamaican Top Ranking Discomix 12″.

The next is a downtempo CB sampling tune and what sounds like off-tuned SSB (single side band) vocals in parts from Trucker called Interlude 4 – Citizen Band Armageddon. 

And if anyone can comment on Citizen’s Band, Mark E. Smith did with the ditty by The Fall called I’m into CB which contains the classic lyrics:
“This is Happy Harry Plank
From the land of waving palms
Calling out to Cedar Plank
477 CC
There’s no Code 13
In the home of chocolate city
I’m having trouble with the terminology
But I’m into CB”

Above is an odd recording of CB truckers across the pond just as COVID was starting, mad stuff!

Have a good weekend and may the sun shine on your garden again tomorrow.

It’s time to choose your handle and pick up your microphone

A big thanks to whoever the operator was on the US pirate radio station “High Frequency School of the air” (via Cloudsplitter Radio) for playing Madtone’s i-Society on the shortwaves the other night at 6.24 in the youtube above. We salute you and do love your transmission.

After the Madtone tune a great programme follows, it’s a retro style low down on CB Radio. As the the commentator says “These are the sounds of your new party line, CB or Citizens band radio. It has a language of its own, your new language.” Listen in and memorise the 10 code, more on that here.

Wow it’s 23 degrees in March (not in the UK sadly!)

Thanks to Debby H who is away in Tenerife at the moment where it’s a lovely 23 degrees. She sent us some pictures of the garden of where she’s staying at and it looks fantastic. We love this view above.

The bird of paradise/crane flower (strelitza) there looks well established (above) and we did a plant search on the plant below using Plantnet and it came up with agave. If we’re wrong on that, please do let us know but it’s great to see all these brilliant plants on their home turf so to speak and in their full glory. Cheers again Debby!

It looks like spring has sprung

Pic: The pond this morning.

A big thanks to our good mate Gerry Hectic for sending us a mix to celebrate this first day of spring called “A sunshine mix in spring”. It’s a brilliant garden/nature related mix and one to have on when you’re sowing those first vegetable/flower seeds indoors on the potting table (in our case the kitchen sink!)

Here’s the tracklisting:
Intro – Ursula Rucker (& Charles Webster) – Begin Anew (Acapella) Edit)
Alabaster DePlume – That Was My Garden (Edit)
Tunng – Snails
Oscar Jerome – Smell The Daisies feat. anaiis (Radio Edit)
THSA – In Bloom
Late Nite City – Higher Ground
United Freedom Collective – Moonshine
lovetempo – But I Do (Daisybelle Remix)
Gabril Gosse – Breeze ft. Emile Parisein
Shane Sato – Gardenia
Yahushi Ide – A Place In The Sun
Ebi Soda – Bamboo
Evren Furtuna – Little Flower
Ursula Rucker (& Charles Webster) – Begin Anew (Acapella) Edit)
Chaos In The CBD – Midnight In Peckham ft. Isaaz Aesilli
Ursula Rucker (& Charles Webster) – Begin Anew (Acapella) Edit)

So raise a toast to Jean-Michel Jarre if you’re that way inclined or just to the forthcoming season when one day soon you will wake up and not see a frost. Cheers Gerry!