Monday, 2 March 2026
Root Trainer Tree Trays
Sunday, 1 March 2026
Freecycle Find
Collected today, I will use on the strawberry bed and on filling the the new raised bed. Which is best for the strawberries Hay or Straw?
Planning and Reviewing March in Previous Years
Reviewing the diary over the last thirteen years for March
2017 - Infrastructure works, Grow Stations created, walking Onions Bed and Comfrey pipe for Plot 23B, seeds sown and Grow house at home full, Onions and Beetroots sown on allotment.
2018 - The Beast from the East and snow early March this year, Infrastructure works, Woodchipped the paths on plot 1A, Catawissa Walking Onion Bed installed, Catawissa Onion Planting Membrane made, Sowing in Grow Stations from the 9th March, Onions and Beetroots sown on allotment, The Agralan Compact Plug Plant Trainer purchased and used for the first time, Raspberries purchased and planted, Soilfixer over Winter Experiment concludes, Sprout Sowing, Mr Fothergill's Optigrow® Leeks Experiment.
2019 - Infrastructure works, Buy Seed and Cutting compost from Tesco, Quad biking for my Birthday, Onions in Modules in the Growhouse, Chitting Potatoes, Woodchip behind the shed, Full day on the plot as Jen taken out for the day, Cutting and painting timbers for beds, accident injuring leg. Picked up a load of paving slabs off Freecycle, visit to hospital as I had Cellulitis as a result to the injury to my leg. First Early spuds in buckets.
- Greenhouse 1 - Currently being used to house all the cardboard to be used in the new raised beds
- Infrastructure - Bed 16A Completed, Bed H1 started, to be completed and Beds H2, 14 & 14A to be started and worked towards completion.
- Infrastructure - De-Band Scaffold Boards & Assemble more Raised Bed Frames
- Rhubarb - Weed and Mulch
- Raspberry Beds - Weed and Mulch, then build cages
- All Gold Raspberry Beds - New Fencing to be installed
- Climbing Frame Greenhouse - Weed and Mulch
- Greenhouse 1A - Set up more Coffee to dry out
- Daleks - Dig in the additional Daleks along the path with plot 2A
- Grape Vines - Prune
Saturday, 28 February 2026
Removing Banding From Scaffold Boards
An afternoon on the allotment using the hammer and chisels to remove the banding to the end of scaffold boards that will be used to make the raised beds
Also an opportunity to stack the boards so they can breath and to dry out after all the rain we have had
Not as sexy looking with the timber but also not going to fall apart again. My son-in-law used far too many screws. if he had done what I asked he would have got both greenhouse dormers strengthened, and I would not have the rebuild to do for the Plot 1 Greenhouse.
Friday, 27 February 2026
My Journey To Growing Potatoes In Buckets
My earliest recollection of growing potatoes was in my back garden of the home I lived in when I was 7 helping my Dad. We did the traditional digging a trench spacing potatoes out at 100mm - 150mm centres (well 4" - 6" as we had not gone metric then) in rows, and then as they started to grow, "Earthing Them Up" piling soil 120mm - 200mm ( 5" - 8") high around the stems to encourage tuber growth and prevent sunscald. The mounding increases the underground stem area, boosting yields and is traditionally done 1 - 2 times, stopping when plants flower.
Originally back in April 2013 my first year on an allotment, I decided not to grow potatoes in the traditional way i.e. trench cover and earth up.
I marked up a 2.4m timber with the centres for the potatoes, 240mm and used the Auger to dig neat 75mm holes 150 - 200mm ish deep - and handful of compost and then popped the potatoes into holes, covered with compost then a layer of native soil.I then racked up the soil as we had a frost the previous night, as I had read that some people pre mound their spuds and I thought it may offer a little more protection.
So I decided the have a bash at it in 2014 and decided to make a sheet a bed size 2.4 x 1.2m and cut the holes for planting the spuds and for the Haulms to find there way out of the ground. Potatoes are not stupid the foliage wants to find the fastest way to the surface which is straight up. The weed membrane keeps the moisture from evaporating too quickly in very hot weather and the sun beating (OK it's the UK) occasional shining on the soil via the hole in the membrane, it draws the foliage to the surface and the hole in the membrane.
So that second year 2014, I decided to use the same configuration in the weed membrane as I had the first when planting without membrane. That's the layout on the left, the hole diameter is 100mm as I have a soil hand Auger that is 75mm dia and I needed a little tolerance. last year I created the weed membrane layout on the right for second early where the recommended distance was less and the three holes with crosses had pop bottles with pin holes sunk in the ground head first, so that I could water at depth. Its easy to extend the height of the pop bottles by cutting them off at the bottom and stacking them upside down as the Haulms get taller.
As my soil is clay based, I use the Windowed Auger head below. I only have this bit of kit as I use it for taking soil samples for work as a structural engineer, my neighbouring plot holder uses a long handle bulb planter to plant his spuds
The biggest mistake I made the first year using weed membrane was in cutting the weed membrane with scissors.
So here was the potato beds in 2014, I had managed to acquire quite a lot of plastic trim from the window replacement company that was moving to make way for the housing development behind the allotment.
Using the weed membrane on spuds, I would say worked very well for me, for a long time. I very quickly made specific sheets for Sprouts, Cabbages, Cauliflower, Sweet corn, and in 2014 I also used them for Onions, Spring Onions and Beetroots, the less weeding I have to do the more I love my allotment.
In 2016, I had upgraded two of the bed edgings to recycled timber joists. Once again I used the soil Auger and planted through the weed membrane.
In 2017, I again had four beds of spuds in the ground planted via weed membrane, however, I also undertook The SoilFixer SF60 Potatoes in Buckets Experiment which was planned way back at the end of 2016 when Tony Callaghan the Managing Director of SoilFixer asked me if I would be interested and like to trial some.
Now if someone wants to provide me with free products to trial, it would be rude to refuse wouldn't it? As long as they understand that I will be impartial and give an honest review and opinion of the product when I blog about it.
In 2022, I completed mixing up the soil, compost Coir and fertiliser with the 600mm Power Planter and the Ryobi Drill and placed 4 Main Crop Java seed potatoes in each bucket.
Two Java main crop spuds at a 1/3 depth
Then two more added at 90 degrees to the first two at 2/3 depth finally topped up and then taken to bed 1 which is where I placed them this year. As the potatoes are harvested the contents of the buckets was placed on a bed that needed topping up.
Bed 1 with the main crop java spuds in buckets, I really needed my sister to cut her grass and donate the grass to me for mulch on top of the spuds in buckets.
These type of pots are very popular with allotment plot holders, because they are so useful, and I did have a few that were, how would one say nicely, borrowed without an intention to return or consent. As a result of this experience, I ended up branding the handles of those that I had left with my trusty soldering iron. Thankfully the individual with sticky fingers is no longer a plot holder on our allotment site.
The potatoes on the left have been brushed off with a wide paint brush and the spuds go home clean.

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