See how the crops that we grew in 2023 flourished (or didn’t!) and how the growing teams felt about the work and results.

Each team is familiar with how its own plots got on but not necessarily with the other parts of HCF. Find out how things went across the Farm – and what to think about for the crops that your team is growing in 2024. Thanks to all the Team Leaders for this feedback.

Plots 1 & 2

Carrots: sowed Early Nantes in March, a cold spring but much too early. Had to resow all March sowings as germination was very poor. This was not seed quality as April sowings germinated very well (Maestro sowed 29.04.2023) and grew very well. Enviromesh works very well to exclude carrot fly but as the carrot foliage fills the net it becomes harder to weed, though extensive weeding was carried out. Also, we found the netting + foliage provides habitat for field voles which nibble the top of the roots and sometimes the whole carrot. In September, we removed netting and by the next day a kestrel was hovering over the carrot plots!

We continued sowing carrots into mid- July (Autumn King). These germinated very well/grew well and seem to have avoided significant vole damage.

Carrots generally quite good but we need to emphasise THIN sowing. Everyone was too heavy handed with the seed, even though we used the seed dispenser.

Parsley, Basil and Coriander did well on plot 1. Parsley in particular, is robust and trouble free.

Turnip: relatively easy to grow but significant damage from flea beetle. Planted 21.03.2023 and repeated again in September. 

Swede: as per turnip but seemed much less attractive to flea beetle.

Kohl Rabi: relatively easy to grow. 2nd sowing 11.06.2023

Mooli: very easy to grow direct-sown and plants are vigorous and appear trouble free, but on harvesting the roots a significant number had been hollowed out. Couldn’t find any obvious pest but some roots rotted off without obvious cause. Need to sow more thinly next time.

The above four root crops are not popular with stakeholders and were definitely a hard sell, particularly when competing with summer crops. I would question whether it is worth growing these four crops at all.

Kale, Cavolo Nero: relatively trouble free. Had to have a concerted effort to hand-pick cabbage white caterpillars off the plants June/July. Some significant damage but plants recovered well after caterpillar removal. Reasonably popular with stakeholders and a good crop still producing.

Pak Choi (actually sowed this on plot 1). Sowed in August to avoid bolting risk. With hindsight, this was too late as we had only a few small plants by early November, although these sold readily. Somewhat prone to slug damage. Tried sowing in 3” pots and in toilet roll tubes as an experiment. All toilet roll seedlings were small and weedy and never made significant growth. Having tried the same with sweet peas in the past and also failed, I suggest that toilet roll tubes appeal to our recycling instincts but are useless for raising plants.

Spinach – has done fantastically well, pest free and easy to maintain.

Plots 3 & 4

Feb and March, we prepared beds and paths.

Parsnips: Started sowing 8th April. 4 rows per bed. Better germination and growth on the Gladiator than the White Gem. We forgot to earth up the parsnips to reduce canker. Started harvesting in November.

Carrots: We sowed some carrots in the gaps where we had poor germination from the parsnips and these were affected by the carrot fly and gnawed by mice.

Tomatoes: Started planting out the tomatoes 16th May. We didn’t stake these to start with or start training them for several weeks. It was a great labour to get them back into some sort of order. We lost some plants due to blight. There were blighted potatoes on plot 6 so spores probably drifted from there to us. The other tomatoes on plot 19 were not affected at that time.

Winter squash: We sowed 200 butternut squash seeds and 50 each of the other 3 varieties. This a was an extra 20% in case of poor germination. We started sowing on 19th April. All were sown by 1st May. They were covered by perspex as advised. As they emerged, we swathed them in green netting. By 3rd May, the Crown Prince seeds had mainly been eaten by Mice. During the following week, Kabocha and Uchi Kuri had been eaten and some of the tops of the butternuts that were emerging had been grazed.

8th May: 75 butternuts survived and were covered in net and grown on in the Polytunnel and then in the hardening off area as it was very hot in the Polytunnel. We took all the remaining pots home to resow and germinate in our lounge and on the verandah/patio.

By the last Saturday in May, our plot was full of butternuts and Kabocha squash. 1st June, Matt and Claire took Uchikuri pots home to germinate. These ended up on Penny’s plot with more butternuts. In June, we were giving 5 litres water per plant per week and checking hydration mid week and topping up if necessary.

Excellent harvest in October. 

Plots 5 & 6

The green manure we sowed last year had a lot of grass in it which was difficult to remove. All crops germinated and grew well.

Calabrese was very good, produced a lot, and lasted a long time.

Cabbages grew well but many split, probably should have harvested them earlier but were told to wait for other plots.

Potatoes: All potatoes grew well and produced a lot but half of them had wireworm. The spud mix didn’t work because, as we found out afterwards, we didn’t dig it in properly.

Plots 7 & 8

 Autumn sown broad beans attacked by mice and weather, so just spring sown beans were cropped. I think the Crispus are a little better than the Doric (but Doric are still OK)

Hispi type summer cabbage, the Greyhound, a grew and sold better than the round type Golden acre/primo.

Cavolo nero always does well.

Plots 11 & 12

Potatoes: Acoustic performed very well – good sized potatoes, cropped well, relatively free from holes. Vivaldi potatoes were small, very tasty, but the harvest was poor. King Edwards disappointing. They developed blight quite early and we had to dehaulm them so the overall size of the potatoes was small. About a third of the crop had worm holes. Sarpo were big potatoes but we only grew 3 rows which got mixed with those from other plots. Seems there is a problem with star-shaped brown cavity in the middle of the potato. No info on number of holed potatoes as we were not around when the team dug them up. 

Beetroot: some opened seed packets did not germinate at all well at the start of the season. Planting test pots early on was a good indicator of what seeds to throw away. We eventually had good crops from Detroit 2, Boltardy and Cylindra (pack supplied to us by Polytunnel Lin). Last bed sown in late August was a bit too late but we were harvesting plenty of good sized beetroot until the end of October with a few smaller beets in early November. A lot of rain helped and emphasised the need for a lot of regular watering when weather is dry. 

Celeriac: really important to take leaves off once they drop and this task got away from us at times – along with the associated weeding. All celeriac were small but most of the early plants survived so we were able to plant out a lot. Once plants go to seed take them out immediately as the bulb will not develop and it is a waste of time later on when they have to be dug up anyway with no bulb developed underneath. 

Both these crops continue to be harvested late into the year, which makes it very tight to get spud mix in if you’re going to grow potatoes afterwards

Plots 13 & 14

Cabbages: the smaller cabbages – Greyhound & Sunta, were generally the most productive of the brassicas. The success on quick germination of those Greyhound & Sunta that we started at home, in particular, was excellent.  Some challenges with butterflies and caterpillars, (so nothing to with the seeds, obviously), but not too bad.  Those smaller cabbages also seemed particularly popular with buyers.  As we thought they would be, the Ormskirks have been slower to grow, & so, we haven’t harvested any yet. The January Kings, the seeds of which we disposed of because they weren’t cutting it, & the red cabbages, have been the only real under/non-performers

Potatoes: The Sarpo potatoes were superior to the Cara in as much as the Sarpo were a lot less prone to both wire worm and blight. With Cara, the damage from either wire worm or blight was about 50%. So, if Sarpo is not going to be available in 2024, we think that the closest comparable seed would make sense.

Plot maintenance has generally been quite manageable over the year.  God put in a good, helpful watering shift overall, and we were generally able to cope with the weeding, including under the nets on P13.

Plots 15 & 16

Beans: The total weight of dried beans was just over 56 lbs and they are being sold as mixed bags of a half pound weight each.  I attach a table giving, for each variety, the total yield, the length of row grown in feet and the yield in ounces per foot. 

Borlotti were easily the most prolific followed by Blue Lake and Czar. We would have had quite a lot more but an additional half row was accidentally planted late with a dwarf bean of unknown variety that wasn’t very successful. 

We had two types of black beans, one in a plastic bag handed on I think from Tudor and some Brazilian beans provided by Maria, to which we gave a row each. I think Tudor’s were more prolific but there was a bit of a mix-up and I couldn’t reliably distinguish them so have combined them for weighing.  They were some way behind the best three in terms of weight per foot grown.

Plots 17 & 18

Onions: Sowed 3,000 onion seeds and germination was very good. Planting out was more difficult as we went into the dry period and it was difficult to give them enough water to put their roots down. Growth improved in July but downy mildew was a problem as we had so much rain. Harvest probably not as good as last year but not bad considering the growing conditions.

Chard and Perpetual spinach were also affected by the heat in May/June and many plants bolted.

Courgettes: Germination for the Tosca courgettes was zero – very disappointing but the patty pans did really well and gave us an early crop until the next sowing of courgettes was ready to go out. The team did a really good job of harvesting them 3 x a week so they never got to large.

The overflow squashes took off well and provided a good additional crop of butternuts and Uckiki Kuri.

Plots 19 & 20

The poor germination of a lot of seeds led to delays with all crops and the need to re plant. Lettuce – we had a steady supply of lettuce throughout the summer and still harvest lettuce leaves.  We overestimated the demand and due to over sowing and difficult weather conditions, we lost quite a few as they bolted in the two dry periods.

Cucumbers – excellent crop from 19 plants.
Spring onions – initial crop failed and re-plant of new seeds failed.
Tomatoes – very successful after problems with seeds initially.  Problems keeping up with tending them as they became bushes.  We should have used stronger supports from the outset.
Padron peppers – problems with germination and keeping them alive.  Small crop eventually.
Radishes – poor germination and stunted growth.

Onions: Our over-wintered onions started to grow again in March/April but they bolted later and became over run with weeds whilst we focussed on Plot 19 during the drought. The harvest was good but it was difficult to get the balance right of preparing the beds for the next crop (kale seedlings) and harvesting the onions, especially as the salad crops were so intensive and our team was depleted due to a departure and illness and spending so much time keeping the salad crops alive. 

Kale: The kale seedlings were established but some were squashed by the hoops and netting and we are getting slug damage across the board plus heavy rain is causing leaves to droop and sometime snap off.

Polytunnels

 We went a bit mad & tried a bit of variety this year including cucumbers, gherkins, padron peppers, loofah and 26 different tomatoes as well as chillies and herbs. Most produced good returns.

Germination in Spring was slow and several varieties of tomato were lost to frosty weather in March. Main harvesting began in July & continued until late October. By mid-August, we had picked 250 pounds of toms but had lost a similar quantity to blight. A different management will be needed next year to try and prevent wastage. Overall, the quantities were down on the previous year but not by much. A couple of varieties were more reliable than others. Maskotka produced an early moderate crop that kept going well, Orkado & Shirley produced good trusses of an average size fruit and cherry varieties always crop well. Sadly, the plum varieties suffered blossom end rot.

The padron peppers struggled in the tunnels, which was a surprise. Aubergines were late in and, although producing a few autumnal fruits, were not worth the space so I shall not bother next year. The sweet peppers appear popular so I shall try again but will have to watch the watering system & planting distance. Mildew hit them. Pam has done her best with chillies & had a good steady crop up until November.

The winter salad leaves did well at the beginning of the year and are just starting to provide small quantities now with winter lettuce to follow. Susan has, again, got a good lot of lettuce maturing.

Soft fruit

During 2023, we introduced 2 new fruit varieties, summer raspberries and blackberries. Both performed really well in their first years, with the blackberries being a particular highlight, although they were tricky to sell for some reason perhaps because people could pick them for free in the hedgerows.
We finally had a decent harvest of gooseberries after tackling the sawfly for a number of years. We won the battle this year but have not yet won the war…
We did not get so many strawberries this year, but are hoping for a bumper year in 2024 after the stock of new variety strawberry plants has been increased significantly.
Other stars this year were the tays and forced rhubarb.

Fruit trees

2023 for the top fruit team was a year of diversity. There was nowhere as many apples as the previous year due to a combination of factors including bi-annual behaviour but also recovery from the very high temperatures of last summer (loss of sugars) and the wet weather during the pollination window in spring. Altogether harvest was enough to feed the farm, but very modest compared to other bumper years where there has been more variety to offer and we could afford to do up to two bottling runs to juice. Many trees gave a single tray of fruit to harvest. On the positive side, the very wet summer has meant that the trees didn’t suffer from drought or heat stress and in return looked much healthier this season and had less signs of disease. The aphids on the growing tips seen during the hotter late spring spell disappeared as soon as the rains set in, and nothing much followed it. The outlook is that, given good conditions for next year, we will see the trees stronger and a bigger harvest. 

The lack of apples was compensated by the huge bounty and variety in all the other fruits: 2023 was the year of the plum. the Mirabelles kicked the season off in an abundance of trays of red and yellow plums, followed by a very heavy and long crop of our two purple Pershore’s, ending with greengages and Victoria. The only plum trees that didn’t produce where the yellow Pershore’s in the shade.

Pears cropped fantastically and for the first time ever we harvested trays of very good quality fruit, the Comice tree giving some first class pears. The trees where healthy with no signs of leaf mite.

Last in season, we took a very good quality crop of quinces that didn’t suffer any brown rot like last year. Only one of the two cherry trees fruited, but the harvest was lost to wildlife. The peach trees turned out some lovely fruits for the first time, but not enough to feed the farm.