The photo above, is a view from the kitchen back door, The wicker furniture will be going and I will be replacing the timber decking on the patio this year, but for the moment the furniture is supporting scaffolding boards that I can drill and screw ready for assembly.
I have been fighting to convert my allotment into a more disabled friendly place, but finally I have decided I will have to give up half of my allotment Plot 1A or the whole allotment Plots 1A & 1 at the end of this growing year in October.
What's made me come to this decision?
A number of factors I guess, I have early signs of cataract in my right eye and my diabetic eye exam noticed a little bleed behind my eye. The government is targeting 70 year old drivers, and I'm only two years away from being 70 and although my eyesight is Ok at the moment it's going to get worse and if I can't drive, my allotment is just too far away from home to get to and from easily.
With the impending fuel shortages, cost and availability of fuel may again prevent me from filling the car allowing me to get to and work my plots.
WWIII is here and the government is targeting our farmers and trying to destroy our ability to feed ourselves, and I believe there will be food shortages, and as in WWII one will be encouraged to grow food in the back garden, so I want to be ahead of the game.
And finally I love to grow vegetables, and have no practical other use for the back garden, these days.
I have cut scaffolds boards to make more raised bed at the allotment but they are stacked on a number of raised beds. that are already constructed. I will need to remove these boards so I can actually use those beds, this year.
So I've made the decision to bring those scaffold boards home and set up a mini allotment in the back garden. The photos taken this morning in this post show how far I have got over the last couple of days, building raised bed frames and laying out the beds.
I will be putting paving slabs either side of the beds so I can get out there all year round. I have been collecting paving slabs off Freecycle for the last 12 years, so they may as well come home with me as well.
The row at the back that has three beds allows me to locate the beds such that a path of paving slabs can be placed parallel to the retaining wall. A storm broke the post in the fence where the trellis has been removed either side in 2023 when I was being treated for cancer and I'm going to replace it this year, now I have regained more mobility.
We have not used the umbrella washing line for around 15 years and that will be going, if I can manage to extract it from the concrete base!
First batch of woodchip to fill the first level of frames to reduce the amount of compost and topsoil required. I need to bring blue water pipe hoops and debris netting home before I start filling as there are too many cats that come and use our garden as a litter tray. I have loads of cardboard filling my greenhouse on the plot, that will come home to cover the grass in the beds before the woodchips and old timber I have goes in the bottom of each bed.
Photo taken from the back of the garden up by the greenhouse at about 3:15pm
The sun rises at the front of the house and gradually comes around to the rear of the house, which means I can keep out of direct sunlight in the early morning and then the apple trees offer some shade until early evening when the garden is once again in direct sunlight.
The medication I'm on advises me to keep out of direct sunlight, and I have taken to wearing long sleeved T-shirts and a Winne the Poo hat with neck flap, but having the allotment in the back garden will allow me to work in areas of the garden that are in shade throughout the day.
This was another factor that made me decide to do this, as following the building of the flats and the removal of the trees at the back of Mill Green plot 1A, I no longer have a source of shade, other than the potting shed which is normally 10C - 20C hotter than the outside temperature.