Posted by mark on July 25, 2011, 7:36 am
This weekend to my surprise I found that one of the plum trees carried ripe
plums. These were all picked and sold at the gate this weekend. They sold
really quickly. Usually they are not ready until the wasps are out in force,
so we got a good crop this time instead of the usual third to wasps, third
to windfall.
Can anyone advise as to what this variety might be based on its earliness.
Plums on the other tree are still green.
mark
Posted by David Rance on July 25, 2011, 8:17 am
On Mon, 25 Jul 2011 mark wrote:
>This weekend to my surprise I found that one of the plum trees carried ripe
>plums. These were all picked and sold at the gate this weekend. They sold
>really quickly. Usually they are not ready until the wasps are out in force,
>so we got a good crop this time instead of the usual third to wasps, third
>to windfall.
>Can anyone advise as to what this variety might be based on its earliness.
>Plums on the other tree are still green.
I don't think it matters what the variety is as all plums seem to be
about two to three weeks earlier this year. Normally my plums in
Normandy ripen during the first week of August but this year they were
ripening last week while I was over there. That means that, because I
can't get back there until the second week of August, I shall lose most
of the crop this year! :-(
David
--
David Rance writing from Caversham, Reading, UK
http://rance.org.uk
Posted by echinosum on July 26, 2011, 9:08 am
'David Rance[_6_ Wrote:
> ;931043']I don't think it matters what the variety is as all plums seem
> to be
> about two to three weeks earlier this year.
Odd, isn't it. So much other stuff is late.
--
echinosum
Posted by kay on July 26, 2011, 4:46 pm
Plums were very much in evidence in the Vale of Evesham today, and the
yellow ones on hedgerow trees wee beginning to drop.
--
kay
Posted by Bob Hobden on July 26, 2011, 1:32 pm
"David Rance" wrote..
> mark wrote:
> >This weekend to my surprise I found that one of the plum trees carried
> >ripe
> >plums. These were all picked and sold at the gate this weekend. They sold
> >really quickly. Usually they are not ready until the wasps are out in
> >force,
> >so we got a good crop this time instead of the usual third to wasps,
> >third
> >to windfall.
> >
> >Can anyone advise as to what this variety might be based on its
> >earliness.
> >Plums on the other tree are still green.
> I don't think it matters what the variety is as all plums seem to be about
> two to three weeks earlier this year. Normally my plums in Normandy ripen
> during the first week of August but this year they were ripening last week
> while I was over there. That means that, because I can't get back there
> until the second week of August, I shall lose most of the crop this year!
> :-(
I was picking ripe Mirabelles down near Moissac last week, back home I
notice our Cyclamen hederifolium are all flowering and some of our main crop
spuds are going over, and that is early in both cases.
-- Regards
Bob Hobden
W.of London. UK
>plums. These were all picked and sold at the gate this weekend. They sold
>really quickly. Usually they are not ready until the wasps are out in force,
>so we got a good crop this time instead of the usual third to wasps, third
>to windfall.
>Can anyone advise as to what this variety might be based on its earliness.
>Plums on the other tree are still green.