Monday 16 March 2009

So it’s been a month since I last posted.

So what’s been going down on the plot since the big thaw?

Well, for a start I now have a lovely new machine called a rotivator. It’s a 5.5 hp beast.

During the winter months I have been hand digging with what felt like no end in sight. Pulling out bramble clumps and perennial weeds from the new section of my plot and digging over the existing parts and adding in my home made compost and bags of well rotted manure.

A couple of weeks ago I removed the carpets that covered three of my raised beds. I have added some seaweed granulised fertiliser into these and have begun this years planting.

I raked over and hoe drilled several rows into one of the raised beds in preparation for the first sowings of the year. Into which I have sown four rows of French breakfast radish - Do the French eat radishes for breakfast? Three rows of Nantes Early Carrots and a couple of rows of White Lisbon spring onions. These are all quick croppers, chosen on purpose so that I can use the bed again in June for something else.

The following week I prepared a second bed in the same way as the first and have sown true spinach, some corn salad and bolt-hardy beetroots.

The over wintered Onions, Garlic and Shallots are growing big guns. Fantastic green leaves and the Shallots are showing several shoots on most of the plantings. The drainage I worked hard in achieving by adding several sacks of sand and the bitter cold weather looks like it will reward me with a bountiful crop in early summer.

The over wintered Cauliflowers are putting on new growth now too. I have several of these. It was hard to believe they would ever get going again after watching them just sit there without any sign of getting bigger since lat last year. The pigeons began their assault on them in December so they are all netted up now and have make a remarkable recovery.

I have planted out a row of Autumn Bliss raspberries, two red currant and two black currants in a section which has been given over to fruits. I have ordered three blue berry bushes which should arrive this week. Will probably sink some large containers in the fruit area to grow the blueberries in. They need a highly acidic soil to really get going and I don’t think I could modify and maintain my soil down to a ph level of 4.5 very easily.

The Summer Strawberry bed has settled down from the digging up and replanting late last year. It was a real mess with all manner of weeds and grass. The Plants set dozens of runners to so I though the best approach was to dig them up, add muck, and plants them back through gardeners membrane and provide a mulch of wood chip to make it look nicer and to hold the membrane in place.

On the 8th of March I planted twenty or so well chitted tubers of Maris Bard, Home guard and another I forget the name of. These went into the third raised bed. When they begin to poke through the soil I’m going to mulch up with straw and other organic materials.

That same week I also dug a narrow trench and planted a hundred or so early peas.

I went over on Sunday this week and gave the rotivator a good working out, or rather it pulled me around for an hour. I'm happy that I first dug the plot over taking out the majority of the roots and weeds as these machines have a bad reputation for turning your weed problem into all out weed warfare by chopping up perennials into thousands of pieces which in turn each grow into a new weed.

The over wintered broad beans were a bit of a hit and miss. It’s my fault really, I hoed the bed just before the killer weather that we had and the loosened soil allowed the ground frost to get at the roots. I probably lost half of them. I grew some space fillers in the greenhouse at home and got them planted in

I have given my Sons a raised bed to do what they want with. Max planted four broad beans I had left over; he has replanted some Rainbow chard for another of my beds. He managed to pinch one of my potato seeds so that went in too. He also planted several sun flower seeds. I had to prise my seed box from his hands as he was about to empty out several thousand carrot seeds in there too. I'll give him a hand next week so he doesn’t repeat last years over seeding.

So it’s been a while and I hadn't blogged for a month because I thought I had nothing to write. Then you get it out of you and you realise that quite a bit has gone on really. Won’t leave it so long next time.

Happy Gardening - Spring is finally in the air.

5 comments:

  1. My god you have put me to shame! Well done on all your hard work. I am growing blueberries too, I dug a large hole, and sank a bag of ericacious compost into each hole then planted up a bluebery plant into each bag! Seems to have been fairly sucessful. Dont forget to puncture drainage holes. Tatty

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  2. You could have filled 10 posts with all of that work and planting!

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  3. Yes your absolutely right, I could have filled in more than one post. I get carried away with the doing bits

    I never wrote a personal diary as a kid and kinda regret that now. The best thing about a personal blog for me is being able to travel back to several months ago and re-read what I was up to.

    The Blueberry plants arrived yesterday. I am very pleased with the quality and care that has clearly been given to raising them. Thanks for the top tip there Tatty. think thats a great idea.

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  4. What do you use seaweed granulised fertiliser for? Is this just a general fertiser for anything? Because I'm just learning I find all these different composts and things a bit confusing. Mind you I find life confusing. Sue.

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  5. Thanks for your question susan.

    I live by the seaside, well the Thames Estuary anyroads, and we have an abundance of seaweed washing up on Our beaches.

    Im new to all this too but read that the Irish potato farmers collected masses of seaweed and spread this onto their farms as a fertiliser.

    So read up about it a bit more and discovered that this stuff is full of nutrients that can be used by your vegetables. It contains (0.3% N, 0.1% P, 1.0% K, plus a full range of trace elements).

    It addition to being a kind of Superfood for the er.....food we are trying to grow.

    Its completely organic. Free of Charge and makes for a fantastic soil conditioner adding plenty of organic matter to my London Clay soil which means I get better soil structure, It retains water better, feeds the worms, and regulates the soil tempurature when used as a mulch.

    Last Year I collected several bags of this and dried it out in the sun. I then ran my lawn mower over it on its lowest setting. Its like a green sawdust now.

    I also use it as a mulch. The low salt content reduces slug damage without affecting the salt content of the soil.

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Hi from Cazaux's Food Factory,

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CFF