Thursday, 20 February 2014

It's the compost, stupid!

If you read any book on gardening or veg growing, one of the things that the authors bang on about relentlessly is to add compost. Cover the bed with compost, fill the hole with compost, use compost as a mulch and so on. This advice is almost always accompanied by a photo of someone barrowing a huge pile of compost across their (perfect) plot, with a huge smile on their face. What they never tell you is how to create the same copious amounts of compost that they appear to be able to.

The thing about growing veg is that you eat the vast majority of what you grow. If you grow spinach you are left with nothing more than the roots and a few outer leaves, if you grow sprouts you are left with nothing more than a woody stem. Of course, you can rely on the weeds for a bit of green matter, but vast in number though they may be, even they are not enough.

Plot 21 does not have a fine tilth (yet). I am pleased with golf-ball sizes of soil but orange size is more usual here.

No sign of a tilth here

I have in the past paid to have manure delivered to the allotment, but now that I have two plots, I can't afford this (at least, I can afford to have the same amount delivered as before, but the quantity won't make much of an impact on all the space we have). We also sometimes go and bag up manure ourselves but still we can never get enough. At the moment I am reluctant to get any at all as it will all be so full of water.

So starting last year I have been trying out green manures. I grew Phacelia, Buckwheat and mustard quite successfully. I had mixed results with Crimson Clover and the Rye and Tares failed completely. 

Buckwheat was the first to go in, once the soil had warmed up. It germinated well but didn't get very tall before it started flowering, the result I think of having a clay soil that dried out very quickly after a few warm days. The Phacelia also germinated well and gave a good covering. I had read that you should not leave green manures to flower as if you do, the stems go woody. And it is true. You lose much of the lush green growth you have created. I struggled the most with this problem with the Phacelia which was alive with bees when it was in flower. Every time I went up to the allotment to cut it down, I would end up just sitting and watching the bees! Not so this year, I'm going to toughen up and cut it all down at the first sign of a flower... but maybe leave a bit around the edges of the beds for the insects.

Both Buckwheat and Phacelia are easy to grow and easy to pull out by hand if they start self-seeding everywhere. They add organic matter to the soil but I don't think they offer huge benefits. Crimson Clover meanwhile adds nitrogen to the soil. I have over-wintered CC on two beds this year and it has been great for stopping a pan forming on the soil surface, so I will grow it again next year. Rye and Tares should have the same effect but mine didn't take off at all. I'm not sure if it didn't germinate or if it did and the pigeons ate the seedlings. I shall have to try again later this year and see what happens.

I have bought a packet of Lupin seeds as they make good green manure. The tap roots are good are breaking up the soil and they also fix nitrogen. But can i really be expected to cut down a bed of lupins before they flower......






Sunday, 16 February 2014

Too good to be true?

At last a sunny day so I ventured up to the allotment for the first time in a week. I think here in Hastings the last seven days have been rainier than any other week this winter. In consequence, the path leading to Plot 21 was a quagmire.

Mud, mud, glorious mud

But there may be another reason for so much mud. A water tank and tap have appeared right on the corner of my plot. The mains water is turned off over the whole allotment site at the moment (in case of frozen pipes) so I can't be sure that the tap will work, but if it does, it will save me a lot of back-breaking work. I counted the steps between Plot 21 and the nearest tap last summer. There are 80 steps each way. I can't wait to see if the tap really does work, and nor can my poor, long-suffering back.

New tap & tank at the entrance to Plot 21

Tuesday, 11 February 2014

Beware the weed-supressing matting

When we took on Plot 21 in the spring of 2013, I was blinded by the size and potential of the plot, and failed to see many of the (literal) pit falls it has.

The former tenant had tried to go for a low maintenance option using weed-supressing matting, both on the paths and as edging round the beds. The problem was that the matting was not good enough to stop the couch grass roots getting through (and making holes wide enough for everything else to get through too). As a result, I have spent a good bit of this winter digging out this horrible matting. At least I can console myself that this is a job that only needs to be done once.

 Don't let weeds get through your weed suppressing matting!

One bed had matting all round the edge and a path across the middle. It has been so wet that huge clumps of clay clung to the roots as I pulled at the matting. Much more back-breaking than digging, and not what you expect to be doing when you take on an allotment.

A whole weed-infested path being removed

The former tenant also dug out holes, lined them with matting, filled them with compost and planted fruit trees and soft fruits in them. When he left, he took the plants with him, leaving us with big, plastic-lined holes. As my god-son put it - the allotment is full of booby traps.

Don't fall into the booby trap.

One of my tasks for the winter was to fill all these holes. I have got most of them done but the wet has finally forced me to give up for now. That, and a frog that I found hibernating in one of the holes.

Not giant mole hills but filled-in booby traps

It is going to be a novelty to be able to walk across the allotment and not fall into a hole, or get bits of matting caught up in the strimmer! Ahh, we have it all to look forward to!

Monday, 10 February 2014

Welcome to our allotment

My partner and I (well me really!) got our first allotment about six years ago. It is in Hastings, East Sussex. Having spent three or four years previous to getting the allotment renovating our newly-purchased derelict house and garden, the thought of taking on an allotment was daunting. The plot we took on was overgrown, full of bind weed, couch grass and brambles.

Plot 52b 2007

I went to take a look at the plot and had more or less decided we would turn it down. But the view over Hastings Old Town to The East Hill and the sea won me over. 

Sea views from Plot 52b

After a slow start we had finally knocked Plot 52b more or less in to shape by 2013. It could have been our chance to relax and actually take a bit of time out to look at the views. But not content with my six rods, I decided to take on a second plot. We were offered one of the of the plots I had always coveted, so how is a girl to say 'no'?

Plot 21 March 2013

Plot 21 is 8 rods tucked away behind a hedge. Alas there are no sea views but there is also a lot less wind and a bit of shade. So we are back to tackling bind weed, brambles and couch grass. Additionally, the soil on this plot has a lot more clay than Plot 52b, a mere two minutes walk away.

This blog is intended as much as a diary of Plot 21's progress as an opportunity to share all that we have learned so far. I hope that in reading this blog, anyone taking up allotmenteering for the first time will avoid some of the mistakes we have made (and indeed some of the mistakes previous tenants have left us with).

Join us on our journey....