I took the day off work to make up for a missed weekend. Despite my good work mowing, the grass had shot back up again and needs another go.

The pond is completely clear and all the hornwort has sunk to the bottom. There was the skin of what I think was a damselfly larva floating on the surface.
I did the deadheading and started picking up dead leaves. The runner beans are shedding, so the wigwam needs to come down soon. I tidied up all the apples, splitting them between home and the compost heap.

I harvested all the gourds from Bed 11 and put the vines on the compost heap. That bed will be empty soon and I think I’ll empty and mix the leaf bins. My marigolds are going to be providing colour for a while though, as we have pretty warm weather.

One of the hyssops is flowering and magically all the ones in little pots have magically survived thanks to the rain. I still can’t decide whether to plant them out into a nursery bed, or put them in the front border.
The mole is back and after tidying up my gate slabs in the morning, it had been back over lunchtime to make more mess.

While collecting seed from the candytufts, I spotted garlic coming up in Bed 6. It never occurred to me that they would be back, I thought they’d rotted. I’ll mulch them when the bed is clearer and we’ll see if they make it over the winter.

I weeded the front border and took out some of the creeping helianthus root. I collected cerinthe, corn marigold, candytuft, poppy, Sweet William and cornflower seed, as well as a few sunflower seeds, and cast it around the bed. There are some big cerinthes already growing and as more seed loosens in Bed 1, I’ll see if I can get some more to cast in the front border.
To add to the unexpected vegetables, I also found a random carrot growing in Bed 1.

The cosmos are doing quite nicely, but I’ve not staked them, which means that some limbs are growing along the ground. My annual bad habit of not staking properly / at all.

Just had to get my lovely successful rudbeckia on the record.

