Saturday, 21 March 2026

Vote for Mill Green Allotment (Sutton)

 

🌱 WIN £1,000 or £500 FOR YOUR LOCAL ALLOTMENT! 🌱
We’ve just launched our Oakland Gardens 2026 Allotment Competition — and this one is all about community support.
There are 17 allotment groups across the UK taking part, and the winners will be decided by public vote.
🏆 Two prizes up for grabs:
• £1,000 worth of Oakland Gardens vouchers
• £500 worth of Oakland Gardens vouchers

As we’ve got a mix of different sized allotment sites taking part this year, we’ve split the competition into two categories to keep things fair.

Smaller site category :

Three Pits Allotment Society

Kimberworth Park Allotments

Castle Hill Allotments

Sydney Street Allotment Association

Tullos Crescent Allotment Association

Community Plot (Gavin Morgan)

Mill Green Allotment Site (Sutton)

Carter Royd Allotments

The winner of this category will receive £500 worth of Oakland Gardens vouchers.


Larger site category :

Armstrong Allotments

Bayer Street Allotments

Brandon Allotment Association

Hellesdon Allotment Holders Association

DALGS Forest of Dean

South View Allotments Association

The Saltings Allotment Association

Stainforth Allotment Association

Pontygwindy Allotments

The winner of this category will receive £1,000 worth of Oakland Gardens vouchers.

The allotments with the most votes by 31st May will win.


Sutton — Mill Green Allotment Site

💬 How it works:
• Anyone can vote
• One vote per person
• Support your local allotment — or simply vote for your favourite
📣 Get involved:
If one of these allotments is in your area, get behind them and help them win.
Share this with:
• Friends & family
• Local Facebook groups
• Gardening communities
• Your own feed
Even if you’re not a gardener, people love supporting local projects 🌿
📍 Allotments taking part:
Aberdeen — Tullos Crescent Allotments
Bodmin — Castle Hill Allotments
Brandon — Brandon Allotment Association
Caerphilly — Pontygwindy Allotments
Coseley — Bayer Street Allotments
Drybrook — DALGS Forest of Dean
Grimsby — The Saltings Allotments
Houghton-le-Spring — Sydney Street Allotments
Middleton — Three Pits Allotments
Newcastle — Armstrong Allotments
Norwich — Hellesdon Allotments
Rotherham — Kimberworth Park Allotments
Spennymoor — South View Allotments
Steeton — Carter Royd Allotments
Stainforth — Stainforth Allotment Association
Sutton — Mill Green Allotment Site
Community Plot — (Gavin Morgan)
Let’s see which communities can rally the most support 💪
Good luck to all allotments involved — and thank you to everyone taking part!

Cutting Grass Paths


13c Sunny down on the allotment from mid-day today various higher readings in the potting shed even with the door open whist I was there.

We have had 4 dry days in a row but also ice on the car windscreen. The grass and weeds have started to grow, so I decided I would trim the boundary beds with the all gold raspberries especially as some wanted to grow in the main path.

Photo above the first trim along the boundary bed

I also went up and down the path between plots 1 & 2 and 1A & 2A it involved a rest break and water and a battery change

Look at that clear blue sky and first trim up the path between plots 1 & 1A and 2 & 2A

Half of the path done on the way up


Second trim off the boundary beds, with a more powerful battery

Lots of Raspberries now pocking their heads up out of the woodchips


Grass cut on the main path to the plot 1 entrance, that will stop my trainers getting wet due to rain or dew 


Path to the plot 1 entrance

Trimming Completed

Full Path width (way over 600 recommended) now cut.

 

Friday, 20 March 2026

Spring Begins


Astronomical spring, which is the one people typically think of, starts at 10:46 a.m., March 20th. Astronomical seasons are based on the position of the Earth to the Sun. Meteorological spring started on 1st March 2026.

We still had lows of 3c overnight and ice on the car windscreen yesterday morning!

Thursday, 19 March 2026

So You Have A New Allotment Plot

 


(c) 2026 Keith Wheeler of Facebook Group Allotment Life For Beginners UK

I love these informative posters that Keith produces and I have made a Keith Wheeler hyperlink label so you can find them all.  Used on manvslug.uk with permission. 

Wednesday, 18 March 2026

Bed H1 Topped Up and Completed

Morning on the allotment 17c Sunny and light winds It was between 44c - 30c in the potting shed, which gave me a buzz as the coffee grounds are in the sun drying out and the potting shed smells delightful.

More 30L pots with handles of soil decanted into Bed H1, then Wally arrived and helped me get the two sacks of soil conditioning compost on the top and I cut the sacks with a Stanley knife and decanted and spread the material over the bed.

Plastic Hoops installed ready for debris netting.


Bed H1 filled with additional soil and hoops added


Bed H1 topped off with conditioning compost


Bed H1 topped off with conditioning compost

Tuesday, 17 March 2026

Chitting Potatoes

 First Early  - Sharp's Express - Taylors 

First Early / Salad Potato - Pentland Javellin - Taylors

Second Early - Charlotte - Taylors 

 Main Crop - Desiree - Taylors

The morning and lunch with the Diginator and Emma, and then down to the allotment in the afternoon when Digs needed his nap. Grandad will be growing Digby some sweetcorn this year.

14c feels like 10c Sunny. I spent most of my time in the potting shed after finding the mushroom trays that I use for chitting potatoes.

I should have got them out of the carrier bags faster and into the chitting trays, they have all grown hair and look like Boris Johnson, and will need a trim, they were a little sweaty, so nothing like ex Prince Andrew, but they can now breath better.

No one has taken any woodchips yet, nice mound

First Early / Salad Potato - Pentland Javellin - Taylors

First Early / Salad Potato - Pentland Javelin - Taylors & Charlotte Salad Second

Charlotte & Sharpe's Express - both Taylors

First Early - Sharp's Express - Taylors on the left &
Main Crop - Desiree - Taylors on the right


Potatoes in Chitting trays, I need to make some labels up one label for each row as I put 4 in the 30Litre Pots with handles from the looks of things I'm going to need 27 - 28 Pots with handles. Easter Good Friday Falls on 3rd April this year.

I need to find out when the water will be turned on as I have coir blocks to hydrate.

Potting shed bench top.


Starbucks Coffee Grounds laid out for breaking up and drying out.

Tales From The Plot

It's getting to that time now to sow/plant or not too ?

The decision is entirely yours but here's a few thoughts you might want to think about before pushing the go button.
This is very much the month when we have to balance Risk V Reward
We get a few very warm days, We all get giddy and get out in the garden relieved we've got through another wet bleak dull winter. We start sowing and planting and Bam another week of hard frosts or god forbid even snow suddenly comes out of nowhere.
But that's what gardening is all about we have to listen to and work with mother nature and give her the ultimate respect.
The bottom line is we have to weigh up that risk versus reward get lucky we get an earlier harvest than other people or we could loose it to frost.
I think awareness is the key here by all means if you think its worth the risk go for it but do it smart, Be aware of your last frost date, get yourself a decent weather app to watch for a frost, and have fleece ready for when its forecast.
If you live away from your plot and cant rush there to put fleece then its probably better to wait than loose your plants.
Sow another batch just in case spread the risk by sowing little and often.
Make sure plants grown indoors are properly hardened off I will post my hardening off and when to plant out guides below.




(c) 2026 Keith Wheeler of Facebook Group Allotment Life For Beginners UK

I love these informative posters that Keith produces and I have made a Keith Wheeler hyperlink label so you can find them all.  Used on manvslug.uk with permission. 

Monday, 16 March 2026

Mulching Raspberries & A Load of Woodchips Dropped Off

11c dropping to 10.5c with a chilly wind this afternoon as I collected 3 wheel barrow loads and four 30L Pots with Handles of mulch worthy rotted woodchips to mulch the Raspberry beds, and clear the woodchip pile so another fresh load could be dropped off by Dave our tame tree surgeon.

Three wheelbarrow loads and four 30L Pots with handles

Woodchip area just before Dave the tree surgeon arrived with his van

Nice looking path worth woodchips

Lots of smoke as he tipped it and it continued for some time after

Idverde came today and treated plot 9 for Japanese Knot Weed 

The Garden Tool Relocation Program

 

Foxes can be added to that list, I have found shoes, gloves and socks left on my plot that are not mine. 

Sunday, 15 March 2026

Bed H1 Nearly Completed

 

A trip to Tool Station to pick up the 5 x 70 T20 Structural Screws for building the next raised bed frame, then down on the allotment today which was Sunny bright and 11C

I started by decanting the 14 number 30L pots with handles worth of woodchip that I have been squirreling away for this very purpose in the bottom frame of the raised bed.


The next job was to cut the short 700mm lengths of Scaffold boards for the narrow parts of the frame, and predrill and screw the framework together on the improvised work bench that is beds 16 & 16 A        

In the photo above you can see the 4 number 2.4m lengths of boards that will make the raised bed H2 to its left.  Fellow plot holder Alex helped me lift the second frame onto the woodchip filled Bed H1 first frame. 

I then used short lengths of roofing batten and screws to tie the two frames together 


I then spread tree leaves over the woodchip and emptied all the 30L pots with handles of decanted soil into the top section of the raised bed, taking cared to spread the soil and remove any bindweed or mares tail roots that I may have missed when originally filling the pots up. 

I have more buckets of soil to decant in order to bring the soil up to the top of the bed, but I had extended my visit by and hour and a half past lunch time, and was quite frankly knackered, so collected my tools, and made my way home.  

The Oakland Garden 30L Plant Pot with Handles have been designed and manufactured with a dual-tier base system and drainage holes to prevent waterlogging and promote excellent drainage and thus healthy root growth, plus it stiffens up the base of the pot. I guess its the ex R&D and Structural Engineer in me that notices these kind of things.

What I hadn't taken into account was just how useful that profile is when lifting and decanting the woodchips and soil out into the raised beds. The Oakland pots are so much easier to grab, and tip out as the dual-tier base system gives areas for your fingers to get a grip and make handling and emptying easy. 

They are so much easier to handle and tip out, than the flat bottomed pots I have from other suppliers.