Friday 19 September 2008

Apples and mud

I just bought (or ordered) some apple trees. I am very excited. I have never planted a tree, let alone one as, well, edible, as an apple. And I ordered THREE! They won't be dispatched until mid Nov at the earliest, since they need to be dormant, but still...
I have ordered:
Redsleeves (you'll have to scroll down a bit to find it)
We have been promising the boys that we would plant apple trees for them, but it has taken us a while to get to a house we are planning to stay in for a while, and also to figure out where we are going to put them. But I have now 'bitten the bullet'... Can't wait!
In other garden news, I have bought some garlic and red onions to go in the garden, since we are supposed to put them in now. The soil isn't too wet as we are lucky to have good drainage here, but I think I need to put in some paths, because I am just treading all over the soil that I want to be planting in, which isn't good for it.
I haven't been to the allotment in a week because last time I went there it was just mud everywhere. Worse than it had been before. Incredibly bad.

We need to get to the builders yard, buy some drainage pipes, gravel and dig ourselves a drainage ditch. Or a pond, which is what our drainage holes have turned into for now! Not great. Thing is that it's a catch22. Too wet to dig, and it's too wet because it hasn't been dug. Ok, so it has rained a lot, but our neighbours (who have dug over their plot already because they got it in spring)haven't got this problem.
So there you go.


Harvested the borlotti beans. Not many of them, but they were lovely. Will grow them again, but just more spread out so they can actually grow!

Oh, and we found a huge mushroom in the garden. Don't know what kind or if it's edible or poisonous. Told the boys not to touch it, but would have been fun to try eating it if we had known it was edible. Always rather fancied doing that, but was way too scared/sensible.

Thursday 4 September 2008

Sun and Showers

We have had such a wet summer, but this last week has been silly. Not really wet, but every time you start to feel optimistic about the weather and hang a load of washing out it starts to pour within 10 mins. So the washing stays out for the next two days trying to get dry.

Today was no exception.

And then... 1 o'clock... sunny. 2 o'clock... still sunny. 3 o'clock... what? Still sunny? QUICK! Get down to the allotment before it starts raining again!

So I picked the boys up from school, rushed them home to get changed, and then raced to the allotment, bumping into my Partner in Allotmenting as we arrived. She had had the same thought! So there were 4 little boys making squishy mud-holes and eating chocolate chip cookies while we yanked more carpet up. Got about an hour of work done. We have cleared very nearly half of the site now!

Spike is going out to play tomorrow so if it's not raining in the morning we are going to meet down there and have another go at it. Must dig weeds while the sun shines.

Oh, and my washing got dried too! What more could I want?

Monday 1 September 2008

Allotment and Home news

We have taken on an allotment. Well, half an allotment, but that's plenty for us. It is totally overgrown, but 10 years ago, when it was last cultivated, some kind soul put down layers of carpet to keep the weeds at bay. And while it didn't exactly do that it did at least mean that the weeds have grown on TOP of the carpet. So it's a carpet of weeds on top of the carpet. So my friend and accomplice in this project and I have been pulling up layers of organic and inorganic carpet to reveal the nearly intact soil beneath. Only a few very determined weed roots, like some nettles, have made it through the carpet layer to the soil, so when we get to the digging stage of things it's not going to be too bad...


It's still really hard work, and we are discovering that we are weak little girls! One of the resident allotmenteers came over and helped out one morning, and such a difference a man's muscles made! Every one we have met down there has been really friendly and welcoming and happy to chat and offer advice and vegetables. Gotta love it! So far I have come home with 3 courgettes (zucchini for you Americans!) and a huge bundle of dark purple beans. Plus the promise of as many strawberry runners as I can be bothered to pot up. Our neighbours are Carol next door, and Helen and Denise across the path.
So far I have only taken Pip and Dude down with me while I have been working, since I can trust them to either help out, or at least hunt worms and stay in the vicinity. Spike is more of a 'free spirit' as yet, and is more likely to wander off and go picking blackberries from someone else's patch! So he comes down with us when we just go for a look, and a walk, for a chat to people, and for picking wild blackberries. All of the boys love it down there. This morning we took another friend and her three kids, and it will be nice to get them all down there to work/play/look for worms/have snail races etc...

Back on the home front the potato leaves have died down, but the potatoes underneath seem intact, so we have been digging them up as and when we need them, and they are so delicious, and so abundant. Potato growing is brilliant. Stick one small baby potato in the ground in late March or so, pile lots of dirt on top of them, ignore them for 3 or 4 months, dig up and find 20 to 30 times what you put in! If only the chap in the bible had invested his talent in a seed potato then when he buried it in the ground it would have been a different ending to the story!


My onions have also been very successful. Small tiny little onionlet put into the ground in spring, large fat mega-onion comes out late summer!


Our carrots on the other hand have been less than successful. I think our soil is too clayey. Not very impressive. Besides, for the same space that an onion takes up you only get one carrot. And while this is fine for an onion (you generally only need one onion per meal cooked) having only one carrot in your dinner is ... well ... not so great. So I think carrots are off my allotment list.

The tomatoes are big and green, but showing potential signs of blight... not great. Hopefully if it develops I can save what we have by picking it green and leaving them to ripen on the kitchen window-sill.

Borlotti beans have not been hugely prolific. Probably didn't like sharing the canes with the sugar snaps (which have all finished now). What they have done has been very pretty though. I will probably save some of the seed to grow again next year... if I don't have any seeds left. Must look through my leftover seed collection!


And here's what we had for supper, in duplicate. Nothing was grown in our garden for this (for a change) but it was delicious non-the-less.