Thursday, 29 November 2018
Next Plot Visit ?
After five days of rain I decided to look at the possibility of getting to the plot in the next 10 days, and I have to say it isn't looking good at all. Possibly the 9th December if I'm lucky and the forecast does not change to rain for Saturday 8th and Sunday 9th Dec.
There are things I can do down the allotment even with everything having been rained on for the last couple of weeks, I don't mind overcast and I don't mind cold, but there is no way I'm working in the rain.
So it looks like more planning and seed stock review during the early part of December for me then.
Sunday, 25 November 2018
Rain Stops Play
Sunday morning I was ready for a cold morning on the plot. It had been raining over night and the temperature was very low around 4 degrees C, but I can do cold what I don't do is rain & wet.
As I approached the plot the rain started to come down, as I got closer it came down harder. I approached the last roundabout on the journey and decided that going home was on the cards.
So a morning on the plot was replaced with sorting out paperwork, shredding paper and cutting up carboard boxes into small microbe/ critter bite sizes and generating a couple of food buckets with lids worth of Brown material for the Daleks
At some stage I really must build the top half of a Dr Who Dalek for one of my composting Daleks
Anyone out there done this already ?.
As I approached the plot the rain started to come down, as I got closer it came down harder. I approached the last roundabout on the journey and decided that going home was on the cards.
So a morning on the plot was replaced with sorting out paperwork, shredding paper and cutting up carboard boxes into small microbe/ critter bite sizes and generating a couple of food buckets with lids worth of Brown material for the Daleks
At some stage I really must build the top half of a Dr Who Dalek for one of my composting Daleks
Anyone out there done this already ?.
Monday, 19 November 2018
RIP Keith
Today I lost the best Brother-In-Law a man could ask for, in fact he felt more like a brother than a brother-in-law. He would do anything for anyone, and was one of life's gentleman, and was the reason I ended up getting an allotment in the first place!.
He had taken over an overgrown plot and asked me to help him measure and mark it out with him. I said to him in passing that I fancied having a go at keeping an allotment and he talked me into taking a plot on the same site. I took my plot on with the idea that the four of us could meet down there and we could socialise on a regular basis. I had not considered the friendly rivalry of growing.
He always managed to out grow me with everything, always donated his excess seedlings to me as he always managed to get early crops with his heated greenhouse.
He would always find something amusing to comment upon, especially how congested my shed and greenhouse on the plot was. The Greenhouse that he donated to me when he bought a much larger one at home.
I will miss you mate but know you will be watching and loitering around keeping an eye on things.
Sunday, 18 November 2018
Winter Tidy
Following my close call with the small portable suitcase cooking stove, my brother in law came to the rescue even whilst being in hospital by donating a large two burner and a grill camping cooker he had in the back of his shed to me. Saturday I went to a camping shop and bought a new longer hose, gas regulator and a small bottle of Calor Gas and a couple circlips.
It didn't take long to set it up on the bench, with the gas bottle at the back of the shelf away from the front that picks up the direct sunlight. I'm so much happier that I have a screw in fixing with a regulator on top that has a stopcock as well as the ability to turn off the burners at the stove.
After making my first coffee, I started by cutting up all the vegetation from the butternut squash that had taken over the South Corner of Plot 1. I did find a half eaten Marrow, which appears to have been the only one that grew under the butternut vegetation. I did also find one more small butternut squash, that appears to have survived the frosty mornings, and is now sitting on the rack in the shed.
I cleared the vegetation and weeds where I planted the marrow and butternut squash and moved the two incinerators onto the bare soil ready for having a bit of a burn up of all the old rotten timbers and dry weeds that I have been storing up. I placed a pallet on the South corner of plot 1 and started to stack the rotten timbers on it so they can dry off in the sun. Once dry and on a future visit this timber will be cut into incinerator length ready for burning.
I moved the saw horses with the 2.4m joist from up the plot to along the plot as I need to clear the plot at the boundary with Plot 1A so that I can get the flower beds put in, but so much timber and items weighing down the weed membrane is currently located there that currently it isn't possible.
So to the middle right of the photo above you can see the comfrey growing in front of the two greenhouse frames in green boxes that will ultimately be used as my fruit cage
View looking down plot 1 with the huge pile of leaves collected last year that need to go into the Daleks as brown material and an old blow away frames that need taking apart.
This is the area that I'm trying to clear so that I can install the path from Plot 1A to the shed and get the flower beds in so that the tulip and daffodil bulbs can be planted.
For the short term, the timbers that have been painted are being stacked on beds 11 & 12 and the piles of joists that still need processing will be able to be relocated across the plot on an additional set of saw horses that I intend to make up on my next visit.
In readiness for working on plot 1 the four trees from last year have been placed on the paths between bed 10 & 11 and 9 & 10 on plot 1A along with the two replacement apple trees that came from Jersey Plants Direct Saturday and were potted up today.
It will be so good when I have all the bed material ready and stacked in their locations on the weed membrane ready for me to pull it back turn over the soil and dig out the weeds.
Friday, 16 November 2018
Nearly Set The Shed On Fire!
My daughters took my wife out for a day of female bonding and shopping, allowing the old guy to spend the morning on the allotment.
The first thing I did after unloading the car, was fill up the kettle on the small suitcase camping stove and light it to make a cup of coffee. I fitted a new gas cylinder and the size of the flame was larger than usual, must be because its a new bottle me thinks then I notice flames coming out of the slider lever control slot. I opened the flap and saw flames lapping around the gas cylinder. I turned off the gas to the burner but the flames continued around the gas cylinder.
I just picked it up the camping stove and threw it into the middle of the plot, expecting to hear an explosion. Luckily the cylinder fell out and the flames went out before anything nasty could happen.
I have heard that these little suitcase cookers can be temperamental, the instructions that come with it tell you not to leave them unattended. Well it will not be getting a second chance from me that's for sure, they are just downright dangerous and it's gone home and been put in the metal recycle bin, minus the gas cylinder of course.
Beds 9 & 10 raked and covered for the winter
Bed 11 cleared of potatoes today and also covered over for Winter.
I ended up with one and a half flower buckets of spuds out of the bed. I will be revisiting and sieving the soil in the bed to try and find any lost spuds.
The first thing I did after unloading the car, was fill up the kettle on the small suitcase camping stove and light it to make a cup of coffee. I fitted a new gas cylinder and the size of the flame was larger than usual, must be because its a new bottle me thinks then I notice flames coming out of the slider lever control slot. I opened the flap and saw flames lapping around the gas cylinder. I turned off the gas to the burner but the flames continued around the gas cylinder.
I just picked it up the camping stove and threw it into the middle of the plot, expecting to hear an explosion. Luckily the cylinder fell out and the flames went out before anything nasty could happen.
I have heard that these little suitcase cookers can be temperamental, the instructions that come with it tell you not to leave them unattended. Well it will not be getting a second chance from me that's for sure, they are just downright dangerous and it's gone home and been put in the metal recycle bin, minus the gas cylinder of course.
Beds 9 & 10 raked and covered for the winter
Bed 11 cleared of potatoes today and also covered over for Winter.
I ended up with one and a half flower buckets of spuds out of the bed. I will be revisiting and sieving the soil in the bed to try and find any lost spuds.
Monday, 12 November 2018
In My Seed Box for 2019 - Spring Onions
A note has been added to my Sowing & Planting Plan for 2019 so I can get Spring Onions going a month earlier than previous years.
Review of Onion Seed Stocks in Zippy Bags
Feast F1 Hybrid - 500 Seeds - £1.49 - Thompson & Morgan - Sow By 2018
White Lisbon - 650 Seeds - £1.89 - Mr Fothergill's - Sow By 2018
White Lisbon - 650 Seeds - £1.89 - Mr Fothergill's - Sow By 2018
Review Of Seed Stocks in Packets
Arrow - 300 Seeds - £2.19 - Thompson & Morgan - Sow By 12/2017
Ishikura - 500 Seeds - £2.29 - Mr Fothergill's - Sow By 2017
North Holland Blood Red - 500 Seeds - £2.09 - Mr Fothergill's - Sow By 2017
Pompeii - 300 Seeds - £2.19 - Thompson & Morgan Kew Collection - Sow By 12/2017
Purplette - 300 Seeds - £1.99 - Thompson & Morgan Kew Collection - Sow By 12/2017
Ishikura - 375 Seeds - £2.99 - Thompson & Morgan - Sow By 2019
Ishikura - 375 Seeds - £2.99 - Thompson & Morgan - Sow By 2019
Purplette - 375 Seeds - £2.99 - Thompson & Morgan Kew Collection - Sow By 2019
Long White Ishikura - 375 Seeds - £2.40 - Johnsons - Sow By 2020
Long White Ishikura - 375 Seeds - £2.40 - Johnsons - Sow By 2020
White Lisbon (Winter Hardy) - 500 Seeds - £1.00 - wilko - Sow By 2020
White Lisbon (Winter Hardy) - 500 Seeds - £1.00 - wilko - Sow By 2020
White Lisbon (Winter Hardy) - 500 Seeds - £1.00 - wilko - Sow By 2020
White Lisbon - 700 Seeds - £2.00 - Johnson from Wilko (20p in sale) - Sow By 2021
Long White Ishikura - 375 Seeds - £2.50 - Johnsons (20p in sale)- Sow By 2021
White Lisbon - 120 Seeds - £1.00 - Carters from Poudland 10p in sale - Sow by 2021
Ramrod - 250 Seeds - £1.00 - wilko - Sow 2022
White Lisbon - 400 Seeds - £1.30 - Kings Seeds Kitchen Garden - Sow By 9/2022
Alphabetical Listing
Sowing Harvest
Arrow Mar - Apr Aug - Nov
Feast F Mar - Jul Jun - Onwards ( Winter hardy)
Ishikura Mar - May Jun - Sep - Thompson & Morgan
Feast F Mar - Jul Jun - Onwards ( Winter hardy)
Ishikura Mar - May Jun - Sep - Thompson & Morgan
Ishikura Mar - Jul May - Oct - Mr Fothergill's
Long White Ishikura Mar - Jul May - Oct - Johnsons North Holland Blood Red Feb - Jul Apr - Oct
Pompeii Mar - Jul Jun - Oct
Purplette Mar - Jul Jun - Oct
White Lisbon (Winter Hardy) Mar - Sep Mar - Nov
White Lisbon Mar - Sep May - Oct - Thompson & Morgan
White Lisbon Mar - Jul May - Oct - Mr Fothergill's
Sowing Plan for 2019
In 2017 spring onions were grown in vending machine cups in tray modules and transplanted into the onion beds plant membrane, but white rot got a few and the rest had to be harvested early or disposed off.
In 2018 I tried to grow them in cut down square flower buckets but the results weren't very good, saying that the Spring was unnaturally warm and dry.
IN 2019 a return to growing in vending machine cups in tray modules and transplanted into the onion beds plant membrane,
Looking at the back of the seed packets, yes I do read them! What I find interesting is the different guidance provided by different seed companies for the same variety of plant. for example, looking at Ishikura Spring Onions from Wilko, Thompson & Morgan & Mr Fothergill
Sowing Outdoors
Mar - May ~ Thompson & Morgan
Mar - Jun ~ Wilko
Mar - July ~ Mr Fothergills
Frequency of Sowing
Wilko & Mr Fothergills both suggest every 2 - 3 weeks for a continuous supply throughout the summer, interestingly Thompson & Morgan advice is that "The long harvest period means one sowing lasts the whole season!" which is kind of mad as there harvest period is shorter than both Wilko & Mr Fothergills ! Thompson & Morgan also states "Can be harvested pencil-thin or thinner, or left to mature to carrot size" although they don't state what kind of carrot.
Thinning
Wilko & Mr Fothergills both suggest no thinning is required whereas Thompson & Morgan state it is!
Harvesting
May - Oct ~ Wilko
Jun - Sep ~ Thompson & Morgan
May - Oct ~ Mr Fothergills
Germination
Wilko & Mr Fothergills both state 14 - 21 days and Thompson & Morgan provides no information on germination, I have seen this missing on quite a lot of their packs and it's something I'm and I guess most other gardeners are actually quite interested in.
I know that like Structural Engineers, if you get four or five gardeners together and ask them a question you are likely to get three different answers but until I see what other suppliers of Ishikura Spring Onions have to say, I think I will ignore T&M and go with the guidance from Wilko & Mr Fothergill.
Sunday, 11 November 2018
In My Seed Box for 2019 - Sprouts
In 2017 I grew
- Bedford Darkmar
- Cromwell
- Evesham Special
- Mongomery
- Rubine Purple Sprout
Last Year I had nine varieties of sprouts in my seed box
- Bedford
- Bedford Darkmar
- Brest F1
- Brodie
- Cromwell
- Evesham Special
- Mongomery
- Nelson
- Rubine Purple Sprout
The Rubine Purple Sprout really have not been good
the last couple of years, and I have decided to ditch the seeds on this one. Based on 10 plants in a bed I decided on
- Bedford
- Brest F1
- Brodie
- Evesham Special
- Nelson
So that's five varieties and I will need two of each to fill the 10
holes in the sprout weed membrane.
A second sowing took place in 14 days - 21 days, after the first, then came the strangest hottest spring weather we've had for a few years and they all died. 2018 was the first year without home grown sprouts and I'm aiming to make sure that in 2019 we get sprouts in the ground and of course for Christmas, Although like a puppy Sprouts are for all year round not just for Christmas.
So the plan is to grow some of all the varieties and plant those that survive. One addition to the list for 2019 is a pack of Fillbasket by Carters Tested Seeds - 100 seeds from Poundland for 10p in their sale.
Last Year I had nine varieties of sprouts in my seed box, replacing Rubine Purple Sprout with Fillbasket for 2019 I still have nine varieties of sprouts
- Bedford
- Bedford Darkmar
- Brest F1
- Brodie
- Cromwell
- Evesham Special
- Fillbasket
- Mongomery
- Nelson
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