Saturday, 9 November 2019

Who are you? Where are you?

I've had the blog for years and although the offers of monetising it always come it doesn't sit well with me. 

But what does interest me is who on earth reads this?

We get stats that we can look at to see who is reading this, and who has read this, but who are you, really?


If you read this, I'd be interested to know why, what are you interested in and how you even got here. 

I'll allow all comments apart from the usual influx of spam or porn. 

It has always intrigued me, who is reading this blog.  

Is there even anyone there? Please comment if you are...



Winter 2019


 Howdy. 

Been a while. 

I've added the blogger app to my phone so that i can access my photos as switching accounts on the Mac and sharing across accounts is to much like hard work. 

So, we have flooding. At the allotment for now...

  

Not as bad as our allotment neighbours' though. Wowsers...it has never been this bad. 


This is the 'field' behind our plot... yes I know, it currently looks like a lake...but it isn't. Behind that is the River Derwent. It is flooding all over the shop, literally as it has even shut down Derby City Centre, which is a pretty rare occurrence.


However bad the plot gets though, this is the field to worry about at home. 


 

If this field floods, we are done for. 

In the back garden, we have the Trent and Mersey canal, which to the top right feeds into the River Trent. They closed off the flood gates to avoid water from the Trent running back up the canal [and onto our gardens and houses]...and to the bottom right is a lock which is right now literally on lock down; to prevent any water coming down the canal. So fingers crossed it stays that way until the water recedes.


 In our garden, we have some nice things still...A Japanese Blood Grass Imperita cylindrica which was on its last legs this time last year, so I dug it up and nursed it back to health and it has been stunning this summer. The mulched section is where we dug out a twisty hazel Corylus avellana, as it was getting too big, and the shape had completely gone, and it was in the wrong place to start with. We will replace it with another, probably a red variety.

  

These Peacock orchids, Acidenthera murielae...we try and put fresh bulbs in each year as they rarely last and these flowered late and when they did, they faced the neighbour's garden not us so I gave them a rollocking and what do you know, they have have turned themselves around and are still flowering mid November.

Saturday, 7 September 2019

Autumn 2019, preparation for the winter.


 So, now that we are starting to get shorter cooler days, as the beds are cleared of the tender crops, I am filling them with the winter veg.

This bed was a potato bed, which was cleared mid August. It was technically cleared much earlier, but I wanted to sieve the potato beds after harvesting to both mix in fresh compost, and to sieve out any remaining potatoes to avoid volunteers, and to remove any bits of non-organic matter that was brought in with the topsoil we bought.

So on the 19th of August I sowed Spinach, two types, Butterflay and Early Prickly. I also sowed coriander which i will transplant to the greenhouse once the tomatoes are all out. And I did a cheeky sowing of one variety of Dwarf French Beans and one of Runner Beans. I mainly did the beans because I like to take a chance on warm weather in the late autumn, I don't routinely sow beans this late. I got the seeds from Seed Co-operative.

These took no time at all to start kicking into action, and I am already cropping the spinach [second picking on the 7th September].



 Bed on 7th September.



I've also sown the three other sieved potato beds with a mixed bag of seeds; mainly consisting of whatever half used packets of anything from carrots to dill, to Chinese cabbages, to kales, lettuces, radishes etc.
These get started and seem to grow better in the beds than in seed trays, so it makes sense to start them off there and then transplant them to their final positions as other beds are emptied. So I've put the more tender stuff into the greenhouse beds [Pak Choi and Chinese Cabbages], and moved the more hardy stuff to the beds that the huge carrots were in.




I'm also doing a winter tomato trial. I've sown some Maskotka tomatoes, around mid July, and transplanted into deep pots. I've put the first two into the greenhouse beds; where I took other tomatoes out. They already have their first flowers on, and the idea is to keep them low to the ground, bending them over if necessary so that the stems root and get as much nutrition as possible, and then see how late I can get them to crop. I did these last night and by the time I got to the allotment today they had already lifted their heads up to the sun. 

I used Maskotka as they are a bush tomato, and they seem much happier in colder temperatures and they also taste lovely.


Summer 2019 - The Allotment

Just as a refresher:

We got the allotment 10 years ago. It looked like this.



We spent years, and years, trying different things. The council had rotavated it before we got it, which chopped up all the weeds, and we struggled to overcome the clay, which sucked up any and all organic matter that we added to it.

After about 8 years, we tried woodchip. Thick woodchip mulches, but this didn't work.  It probably would have had we just left it to rot down but we wanted to get some growing out of it and it was allowing weeds and pests to overwinter and nothing really grew properly.


So just over a year ago we were going to give it up. And put a little polytunnel in at home for tomatoes. When I had a thought - what would I do if I inherited this plot at a school...and I would cover it with weed fabric, and bring in raised beds.

And then I discovered Pallet Collars.

We took a week off work.

Flattened the whole allotment, by raking out all the woodchip.

Then laid weed fabric [30m x 8m plot, £99 for the fabric].


I bought pallet collars. 27 at first. 


I grew over the winter of 2018; I had overwintering onions, spinach, lettuce, coriander and to be honest, we were eating very well through the whole of last winter.

This spring and summer has been bountiful. We've had the best potatoes ever, no slug damage. We've had salads, radishes, tomatoes, more carrots, squashes, garlic, broad beans, french beans - dwarf and climbing, onions, Kohl Rabi, kale [so much kale that I was bunching loads each week like a bunch of flowers, and leaving it at the end of the plot for the chickens down the road], I've got Yard Long Beans to grow, I've got parsnips growing now for winter, we've had strawberries, black, red and white currants, i've put tomatos from armpits into a one collar deep bed and they have gone mad, I've got amazing beetroot and even the later beetroot that was sown is bulking up, so much so that the last batch I sowed, Dobbie's Purple has grown so fast that i can use the best specimens for seed saving for next year.

We've had more crops out of these beds, since last September, then we have probably had out of the ground in the last 5 years.











So, I bought some more, and more and now i am probably at capacity for what we can eat.

So now I feel I am back on an even keel, I am going to try and go back to blogging about growing in these raised beds. They are awesome.

Late summer 2019. Carrots.

I have no regrets about changing the way we grow on the plot. 

I sowed Oxheart Carrots using Baker Creek seeds [from Missouri], which in the greater scheme of things was yes, quite expensive but has already washed its face as they say. 

I sowed them in March, in between the Garlics that I had put in during last October, which I had left over from a teaching session. They germinated quite quickly, and steamed ahead. I was thrilled when they started getting some girth but I never expected this.





Now, I've been saving seeds of plants for years, and I know I shouldn't save from plants that flower early. But, I'm going to let the 3 that are flowering, flower and save the seeds and see if I get decent carrots next year. If so, I'll save from the slowest to flower. It's worth the risk. 

These carrots are sweet, don't go woody and have had absolutely no issues whatsoever.