Wednesday 30 March 2011

Wild garlic breath

While out walking this week I am so cheered to see the buds coming out on trees at last.  It always seem to take so long for this to happen in Scotland! It is great to get out and explore now it is drier and brighter in the evenings and I've been looking to vary where I go walking both for myself and also to find new toddler friendly walks.


Young wild garlic leave sprouting up
The highlight of spring to me though is when the wild garlic  (allium ursinum) comes out and I can make cheap but incredibly tasty dinner with a Parmesan omelette and wild garlic leave wilted in butter on top. Also known as Ramsons, wild garlic grows in damp woodlands with moist soils, preferring slightly acidic conditions. They flower before deciduous trees leaf in the spring, filling the air with their characteristic garlic-like scent. The stem is triangular in shape and the leaves are similar to those of the lily of the valley.

Wild garlic is edible & can be used as salad, herb, boiled as a vegetable, in soup, or to make pesto. The stems are preserved by salting and eaten as a salad in Russia. The flowers are also tasty too so don't just use as decoration! It is also used as fodder. Cows that have fed on ramsons give milk that tastes slightly of garlic, and butter made from this milk used to be very popular in 19th century Switzerland.  But BE CAREFUL not to mistake wild garlic with Lily of the Valley which is poisonous so make sure rub the leaves to check for the strong garlic aroma!  Don't worry about the smell though, it doesn't seem to stay on your breath according to this research! x
 I'm really lucky that it grows rampantly around these parts so I can pick it up easily on the way home from work or out on one of my favourite walks.  I also found a gorgeous walk along side one of the valley's rivers which is ideal for Baby Wild to learn about the plants and fairies that live there.
Baby Wild captivated by the babbling river

Not sure what these leaves are growing amongst the wild garlic?


Friday 25 March 2011

Spring is here!

Learn from yesterday, live for today, hope for tomorrow. The important thing is not to stop questioning planting.
Indeed Spring has finally Sprung in the West of Scotland.  The crocus are fading in my garden and the daffodils are taking their turn at centre stage.  The dwarf blue iris were rather a disoppointment, but that was because I had planted them in such a niaive manner admittedly! Next year I shall have lots of snow drops clumped amongst them as contrast and I've moved them nearer to the front path so they can be enjoyed better.


Am now starting to see quite a few examples of poor planning on my behalf infact! However I shall not beat myself up about this - last year was the experimental year after all so I shall learn, record, dig up and relocate badly planted specimins so they will look even better next year.

Trying to stay ahead of the game this year I have already sown & thinned my cherry tomato, chives, dill & fennel seedlings which are currently cheering up the bedroom window sill.




Here's hoping the weather isn't so bad this weekend , it has been amazingly sunny & warm all week so fingers crossed it'll stay that way.  I want to get some summer bulbs that somehow fund their way into my shopping basket planted. And there is a whole winter's worth of weeding needing to be done!