Monday 23 December 2013

Merry Christmas



Well the last of the leeks from our first batch were taken up at the weekend to go into a hamper for some friends along with some other bits and pieces from the allotment and some homemade treats. That means that once the flood is over and Noah has parked his Ark we can get back down to the serious work of covering the beds over ready for the winter slumber and replenishment of nutrients.

            We do still have leeks growing from the second batch we planted and a few of them are just about coming to the right size for eating. Hopefully between them, the remaining parsnips, the purple caulis, the oncoming sprouts, the kale and the few remaining carrots we will still be eating fresh veg for a while longer before we have to start raiding the stores in the freezer. We never set out to be, nor do we intend to be, self-sufficient but it is a wonderful feeling for six to nine months of the year to thumb your nose at the supermarket veg aisles each week.

            We have been offered a huge 10’ x 8’ greenhouse by a rather wonderful lady I went to school with and it was our intention to dismantle it, ship it in to Nigel, and hopefully start rebuilding it over the Christmas holidays. I think the weather has pretty much scuppered that idea; although we are still aiming to get it built before the spring. We’ve bought quite an assortment of tomatoes (heritage and heirloom varieties with black and purple flesh), tomatillos and peppers (both sweet and hot) for 2014 and having a greenhouse to grow them in would be the icing on the cake. It’s something that we’ve both really wanted for quite a long time.

            We’ve got our seeds already for 2014. As you would expect from us there are a few curios from golden beetroot to blue sweetcorn to multi coloured carrots. We’re also trying salsify, new for us but an old vegetable that has fallen out of vogue in modern times. I’ll let you know how we get on with it later next year.

            We had to reseat a cloche at the weekend which gave us a chance to check out the broad beans. I’m pleased to report that they’re coming on well. Hopefully because of the early planting we’ll beat the blackfly next year. The onions and garlic are coming on nicely as well, although the elephant garlic doesn’t appear to have germinated so I think we may have to buy a couple of extra cloves soon and try with them rather than planting from what we had grown.

            Well that’s all the news for now. I’m sure if the weather abates we’ll be spending a few hours on the allotment over the holidays so maybe more soon.

In the meantime Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year

Friday 13 December 2013

Winter's here!

OK, so the whole Bahrain thing was a complete disaster! The job wasn't exactly as advertised and neither Mary or I were prepared for just how much we would hate being apart. The final straw that broke the camels' back (pun intended) was that there was nowhere for me to grow any seeds! What kind of backward bloody country is that?

Anyway, I'm home now and back on the allotment! Mary had been down and done some tidying up in the couple of weeks I was away. I went down today to just do a little bit of the heavy lifting work that needed doing. We needed to cover over the old potato patch with manure for the Winter to replenish the soil ready for Spring planting. Six bags of horse manure later and the job was done.
We'll just leave that as it is now over the Winter and then give it a good digging over in the Spring ready to get such novelties as blue sweetcorn!

We'll need to order some more manure soon. Once the last few leeks of this year are up we'll be digging that extended bed over and giving that a Winter covering of poo as well ready to turn it in to next years potato bed.

So the only jobs that really remain for this winter now are some pruning of the fruit bushes just to give them a little bit of a tidy up (we were given some excellent advise on this - don't worry about pruning. Just tidy them up a bit and they'll be fine. My kind of gardening), staying on top of the weeding (how come they keep bloody growing over the Winter) and trying to sort out a greenhouse so that we have a bit more luck with tomatoes and chillies next year.

Monday 25 November 2013

Just when you have everything organised!

So just when you think you've got everything organised something comes along and turns all of your plans upside down.

After Mary and I had spent a very happy couple of hours trolling through different sorts of seeds and making our selections and getting our allotment almost ready for Spring planting I went and got a new job............in Bahrain!

Now Mary will be the sole guardian of the veg patch for the next year. Don't get me wrong, I am thrilled to be back in work if for no other reasons than my health and for the sense of self respect it brings. The major downside is that I will be leaving Mary and Lyta behind and will be missing out on a year on the allotment with all of the highs and lows that that brings. 

My plan is to now extend our growing area from Nigel the Garden and Dugless the Allotment to whatever I can do in Bahrain (name to follow). I'm planning on growing some tomatoes, tomatillos and peppers; might as well make the most of the heat and sunshine!

Mary and I spent some time last weekend planting broad beans, 84 in total, to spend the winter under cloches in well dug and manured soil. Hopefully we will have a better harvest than we did this year after we lost our entire crop to blackfly.

My (possibly) final act on the allotment was this morning. I spent an hour extending one area of our plot to make next years potato patch.
Leeks had been planted in it previously and a few remain to be taken up. I cleared the weeds out, turned it over and then dug in some straw.

All that Mary has to do before Winter sets in (with Lyta's help) is spread some manure on the empty beds and then sheet them over for a long slumber ready for the spring and the soil warming up.

I'll let you all know what the growing in Bahrain is like.

Happy Planting

 

Wednesday 13 November 2013

Getting Ready For Winter!

Well it's been a while, but since I have some time on my hands at the minute I thought I would update the blog with what's been happening on the allotment recently.

We managed to harvest most of everything we planted and were rewarded with some pretty good crops. We still have parsnips, beetroot and kale that we are picking as we need them. Everything else has been taken up and stored, ready to see us through the winter. The only major disaster we had this year was our broad beans. They got absolutely smothered in blackfly and we lost the lot.

We've already started planting for the New Year. We have brassicas coming along and the brussels are already showing little sprouts.
Hopefully they'll be at a decent size come Christmas. I have to admit they're not my favourite vegetable but it wouldn't be Christmas without them. Plus we'll have the satisfaction of knowing that all the veg we'll be eating has been grown by us; move over Tom and Barbara - Phil and Mary are here! We've also got our alliums in the ground (red & white onions, shallots and garlic) and they are coming along brilliantly. The only other things to plant before winter sets in are the broad beans (hopefully we'll do better than this year). I've dug the bed over and left it to settle. It's covered it in well rotted-straw so I can dig it in on Friday and then get the beans in and covered with cloches and leave them for the winter.

I had a good couple of hours sorting out our last compost heap this morning. The guy we inherited our plot from took excellent care of the soil, keeping it well fertilised and manured so that it's lovely and rich. However, he wasn't one for tidying! In and around his "compost heap" and plot there were iron bars, asphalt sheeting, bits of old wood, rocks, plastic bags, glass bottles and assorted detritus!

After a couple of hours of picking, digging, pulling and stomping I managed to fill six rubble sacks with garbage ready for taking to the dump. We do have a great clear platform to start another compost heap if we need it!

One of the other exciting things Mary and I did this week was order our seeds ready for next year. We found a new site that has great heritage and heirloom seeds at fantastic prices.
We've ordered a pretty good cross section of seeds, but of course being us there are a few curios that we decided to get - black tomatoes, golden beetroot, purple tomatillos and my absolute favourite...........BLUE sweetcorn!

Well, that's it for now. I'll let you know how things turn out.

Happy gardening!

Sunday 2 June 2013

Loving the sun!

After such a long winter, to have  stretch of sunny days like this is quite a treat.  However, the weeds obviously like it even more than us because they are growing much faster than the crops we actually want to grow!!!!

We took advantage of a weekend of sun to spend as much time in Doug and Nigel as we could, with some fantastic results....

New leeks next to the beans
The main task in Doug was weeding.  Although we've managed to cover a lot of the plot with straw, there's still a few areas which are open and the weed coverage in these was phenomenal.  Plus, even the straw areas had comfrey appearing in abundance - don't get us wrong, comfrey is an amazing herb with all sorts of uses but when it tries to overtake the plot it's a little frustrating!  While I set to starting to weed in amongst the beans / peas / beetroot, parsnip and carrots, Phil managed to get much of the grassy path areas under control and watered the whole plot using dozens of trips to the water butt.  The beans and peas are growing well, as is the beetroot.  The parsnip is patchy but there are some shoots showing through and out of  a whole row of carrot - approximately 300 seeds - we have a grand sum of 5 shoots!  We are fast thinking that carrot is just not something we will ever grow!  Between us we also manged to get some chicken wire up to support the peas.  We did decide to try out tomatoes again (last year was such a wash out) so bought some plug plants from the allotment shop - three plum tomato and three standard ones - to see how they grow in Doug (more in Nigel later.)  Our greatest achievement was the planting of 60 leek plug plants - very exciting - a mixture of two types of leek which should (hopefully) provide us with some delicious additions to our winter stews. Nom Nom Nom!!!


Background fruit bushes and foreground potatoes
The soft fruit is starting to look very impressive.  If everything currently in flower or with baby fruit on actually comes to fruition we are going to have a very jammy year (pun intended)!!!  All three strawberry patches are in full bloom and have a few small fruit appearing in places.  The currant bushes are covered in small berries, as are the jostaberry (a huge bush we inherited) and the gooseberry.  The raspberries should come soon as well.  We've now had our third harvest from the huge patch of rhubarb and there's definitely more to come.  We can now recommend vanilla ice cream topped with warm, stewed home-grown rhubarb on top :P


Onions, garlic and broad beans
We are getting very excited about the onions and garlic, especially the elephant garlic which is now too big to grasp with just one hand.  Although everything is a few weeks behind this year, due to the late spring etc. we think some of the garlic will be ready to harvest almost on time.  We might leave the onions a bit longer but it's getting very hard to resist pulling any of it up to have a look :) 

Nigel is now very much a part of our crop-growing efforts - it's so wonderful to finally have a proper garden in which we can grow various crops and flowers without the fear of them being demolished by people sharing the garden.  Freya and Sophie also seem to like languishing in the shade of a chair and for us, just being able to walk out in the garden at any time of day is wonderful.  All we need now is a table and we could be eating out there too.   There was a lot of weeding to be done here too this weekend but the beds now look a lot clearer.  We nearly lost our sweet pea plants over the previous weekend but I've planted them out now to see if they can recover, including three which will hopefully climb the renovated shelf end from work which I painted to act as a trellis.  The bedding plants are beginning to flower with varying success - at least the pansies are looking good!  

Tomatoes and carrots in the growbags
We've found that now the sycamore tree next door is in leaf, the areas of Nigel we thought would get good sun aren't quite that good.  We've therefore re-assessed the area for growbags and put them up against the fence instead.  Our own-grown tomato plants weren't growing, or haven't grown much in the past few weeks so we decided to put them straight into the growbags as small plants instead of waiting for them to get to full strength first.  We now therefore have 15 assorted tomato plants (they came as a mixed set so until they mature and start to fruit, we're not sure what they will be.)  We've also experimented with another growbag and turned it on its' side to see if we can grow carrots in it.  Since we don't have any luck with carrots elsewhere, anything has got to be worth a try!  We've also got another growbag for spring onion, lettuce and radish so we have a small supply for summer salads.  Since three out of the four gherkin plants died, I've also put more seeds into the raised bed in the hope that they'll germinate quickly.  The courgette plants have each produced flowers now so we're hoping they'll flourish.  The pumpkin is growing but is yet to flower.


The coldframe
The cold frame now has a brand new set of seeds alongside the brassica plugs we've been nurturing for a few weeks.  We have two more coloured varieties of cauliflower almost ready to plant out, along with the red sprouts.  They have been joined by further seeds for sweet peas, sweetcorn and broccoli (two types of the latter with one due for harvest later this year and the other for after Christmas.)



Herbs and our new Acer tree
Our potatoes are growing well.  We're hoping the new potatoes in the border will be ready in about a month, with the two lots in tubs being ready a month or so after that.  Most of them took a while to come through but now they have, we've been having to re-cover them after only a few days.  The herbs are all looking great in their respective tubs but the catmint continues to take a bashing from ours and the other local cats - we're still not sure how long it will be before we get complaints from the neighbours about their cats coming home stoned from too much catmint!


Long may the sun continue :) 

Wednesday 22 May 2013

Things are starting to shoot

Well things are moving pretty fast at the moment, unfortunately so are the weeds! It seems that no sooner have you cleared one area and started on another that the original patch needs doing again. Still, such are the joys of gardening/having an allotment.

We have finally gotten all of the beds dug that we think we'll need, and what can be strawed over has been. This serves two purposes. Firstly in the warm weather it helps to keep the moisture in the ground to prevent it drying out. Secondly, come the autumn once everything is harvested it can be dug in and help fertilise/enrich the soil. Then the whole process can start again in the Spring! Fortunately we have a ready supply of straw and manure at a very good price!


 




The potatoes have started to poke their heads up at long last. I must admit I was starting to get worried. Between the four rows we have on the allotment and the two planters growing in the back garden I'm hoping we should be OK for potatoes for a while come harvest time. We also have a small bed of new potatoes in the back garden as well. This is earmarked for potato salads to go with BBQs!

The onions and garlic are looking fantastic. I'm especially excited about the elephant garlic. We've never grown it before but if what's going on underground is as good as what's happening above ground then it should be most impressive. Apparently these bulbs can grow to over 6" across and weigh in at over 2lb!
 
All of our soft fruit seems to be coming along nicely. We have strawberries, gooseberries, currants and jostaberry coming in to fruit. The blueberry is in flower and our raspberry bushes are starting to show buds.

All in all things are looking very good indeed!  

Saturday 11 May 2013

Farewell Doug and Hello Dugless!

Well it's been a while so I thought I would put finger to keyboard and write an update on our allotment adventures.

We said good bye to Doug, our original quarter plot, in October and moved on to Dugless, so called because the previous occupant had a no digging philosophy, a very nice half plot.

Because of the previous plot holder's philosophy there was quite a bit of work for us to do when we took over. Both Mary and I like a nice tidy plot and tidy beds. However, it would have been churlish of us to complain as Alan, the previous occupant, left us some lovely fruit bushes that we have great hopes for this year. If everything comes to fruition we will be swamped with currants, strawberries, gooseberries, blueberries, raspberries and josta berries ( a blackcurrant and gooseberry cross).




So far we've only managed to harvest some rhubarb, and it made a wonderful crumble! We've got potatoes, various beans, sweetcorn, parsnip, turnip, beetroot and cabbages planted at the moment. We also are waiting on delivery of some leek seedlings and some multi-coloured cauliflower seedlings as well (white, purple, orange and green). I saw them advertised in a seed catalogue and just couldn't resist. Look out for some very colourful dinners as we've planted purple majesty potatoes again this year.

The crown jewels of the plot at the moment  are the various onions and garlic that we have coming on. My brother holidayed on the Isle of Wight last year and brought back some garlic gloves from the Garlic Farm there. They really are looking magnificent, with the Elephant garlic looking particularly splendid.


Now that the weather has started improving (sort of) a lot of our time is dedicated to weeding. The weeds seem to sprout up twice as quick as the vegetables. It's one of those chores that never seems to have an end! The end results are worth the effort though.

At the time we were moving allotment plots we were moving homes as well. We've moved from a flat to a house with a lovely back garden (Nigel II). The beds in Nigel are a mix of veg and flowers now. We also have plenty of herbs, the cats being particularly fond of the catnip, and some growing sacks for potatoes. Once the tomato, courgette and pumpkin seedlings are ready in the cold frame they will be going out into planters and grow bags. They will be joined by some red brussell sprouts as well!   


Despite my saying I wasn't going to bother again I've succumbed and got some chilli plants; Jalapeno, Habanero and Dorset Naga. I really am hoping for a better growing season for them this year

Well that's it for now, hopefully we will get back to regular updates in the future.