A chive obsession

I was sifting through my photographs the other day and I realised how many pictures that I have taken of my chive patch. It may be because, aside from my strawberries, they are one of the only things in the garden not to have been nibbled by beasties, sat on by my cat or dug up by my boy.

Last year I bought two tiny pots of chives from the garden centre. They looked sad and spindly, just a few stems on each. I planted them in a newly dug border at the patio end of the lawn. They grew well over the summer and provided us with many, many cutting of the delicious onion-y flavoured herb (delicious with buttered new potatoes, stirred in to a garlicky mayonnaise, sprinkled in salads and tossed over fritatta). When the winter arrived the bed filled with water and didn’t drain for weeks.

One of my main reasons for wanting a border of chives was for their beautiful, purple flowers. I got the idea of having an edible border was from Alys Fowler’s The Edible Garden. I liked the idea of having a pretty patch that provided colour as well as food. I also planted other cut and come again herbs, a small lavender (lavender flowers are delicious mixed in to ricotta cheese and stuffed into canelloni or ravioli) bush and some spring bulbs (for early colour, not edible). All but the chives perished in the boggy border.

In early April I decided to dig them out. I moved the chives to a pot on the patio and in to a corner of one of my small raised beds. The ends of the chives were yellowing and straggly so I cut them right back, being careful to avoid cutting off any flower heads. Within a few week the flower heads were beginning to turn purple, the recent spell of hot weather brought them into bloom and edible stems are plump and juicy. The boggy border has dried out a bit and has been grassed over. A new site for the edible bed has yet to be determined.

Today in the garden

After a week of hot weather the great British weather has not disappointed and the drizzle has rolled in again, just in time for the Jubilee bank holiday weekend celebrations. While the weather may not be conducive to the picnics, walks and outdoor activities we had planned, it is great for the garden which is literally exploding into colour before our eyes. Last year I bought lots of chives for their culinary uses as well as their lovely purple flowers. Last year we never so much as got a flower head off them (although we ate loads of the onion-y flavoured stems with new potatoes and butter) but this year they are full of flowers and are attracting the bees in droves.

Also doing well are the strawberries which are growing well, unlike the peas and courgettes which have been attacked by various little beasts and have been reduced to little stumps in the ground.

At least it doesn’t rain in the potting shed, which is where we will likely be headed later on today to do a second sowing.

This post is part of the WordPress Weekly Photo Challenge.