Tuesday 30 April 2013

Digging and Planting

April shower with attitude
The bold leap of spring has already hit on a wobble. A few days ago the temperatures were hitting the giddy heights of the high teens, even twenty degrees in some places. Today we are back to just scraping double figures. Frosts at night are not unexpected at this time of year, often followed by glorious sunny days. Today got off to a good start then cloud marched in and turned everything very cold. On Saturday morning we even had a hailstorm.


I have ventured down to the allotment and been busy putting in the early potatoes; this years varieties are Première, International Kidney and Anya. The latter courtesy of a fellow gardener I met at the Master Gardener's induction weekend. I was hoping to get some of the Sarpo varieties but could only find 'taster' packs of five, not
Beds of seeds and mounds of potatoes
enough to feed a family and more expensive. Next to the potatoes I have added two rows of Scorzonera, something which is being grown as an experiment this year as I have not even eaten it let alone grown it before! Carrots have been put in next to the Scorzonera too. I have also uncovered the onions which have been living under the triangle tunnel all winter, they needed a bit of weeding and a lot of water. Next to the onions are two rows of Chard, again a first time for me but I've heard that it is better than spinach, which is a great favourite of mine. Most of the greenhouse grown broad beans have been planted out and are now having their turn under the triangle cloche next to the chard. Next to the broad beans are two double rows of field peas, which I was given, they should grow without needing any supporting pea sticks. I'll just be glad if they grow!
Tomatolings
 

The rotavating which I was waiting for sort of happened. In some areas the soil was too hard and dry for the machine to cut into so It couldn't be turned. There were a couple of places which were easier to work and I have very quickly filled them with plants or seeds. I was left with the quandary of what to do with the other areas which are not only hard to dig but once again choked with weeds, particularly grass. I could just get my spade and fork and dig it over, quickest but also back breaking work. I expect I shall have to do some of it that way because I need room to put in more potatoes and lots more beans. It is in the bean area that most work needs to be done! I have started to try out a different method, the no dig system. It may be a bit late to start because many of the weeds are well established. I have already started covering the ground with cardboard and covering that with soil. It will take a lot of cardboard and it will take some months before I can use it but if it works I shall save myself a lot of back breaking digging. I will cover spare ground with weed suffocating material in future.

Free Butternut Squash
Back in the greenhouse a lot more seeds have been planted, mainly vegetables but some flowers for the home garden. There are signs of life in several trays but the Spinach hasn't come up again, I hope it is just being slow. Using a tip from a fellow Master gardener I am trying to sprout parsnip seeds on a damp paper towel ready for planting out. Parsnip seeds are notorious for not keeping so this is a good way of seeing if you need a fresh pack. So far no life, same for the soya beans.
It could be spring


According to a newspaper today we are going to have a drought in May! Well April was not exactly rain soaked round here. Perhaps I should start growing Cacti instead!

Tuesday 16 April 2013

At last we shall have spring flowers.....

Rip Van Winkle
Wow! We have temperatures in double figures AND the sun has been shining. The wind has turned to the south so the general consensus is that, one month late, SPRING IS HERE! It is late but it doesn't have a note from Mother Nature explaining its lateness, or apologising!! Clearly it has gone to my head. In the garden we have Forsythia, daffodils and primroses. Having spent the last few weeks franticly feeding the birds are now nest building like its going out of fashion. The nestbox cam is set up and we have a Bluetit in residence, it has been roosting in there for a couple of weeks at least. I heard a real herald of spring this evening – the Housemartins have started to return -Hooray!- the first one's were chattering in their nest on our neighbour's house. I don't know what will happen when the three who nested near our bedroom window will do when they get back – Wrens have been roosting in their nest over the winter, there could be ugly scenes.
Borad beans

Enough of the birds what about the garden?! I hear you cry. Well........
Ready to burst
   
The greenhouse is full to bursting with seeds in various pots, cells, bottles etc etc. I have risked the weather and moved the frost tender Acers outside along with the two small Christmas trees and two berberis but they are only just outside and can be shoehorned back in if necessary. The broad beans and peas are sprouting, there is even life in the spinach and tomatoes! The assorted fruit bushes, or cuttings of fruit bushes are mostly coming to life. I hope the dead looking ones will still have live roots and catch up soon. Out in the garden the Rhubarb has red nodes where the leaves are forming, lovely sweet young rhubarb coming very soon. I have been planting Nigella and Malope seeds in the difficult corner, I also popped in some hibernating Crocosmia which had been languishing in pots. Unfortunately one Ceanothus which was put in for ground cover seems to have been killed by the frost. The wonky Weigela has been moved to the bed where the giant Spirea lives, we only managed to get about a third of it out. Down on the allotment not a lot has happened. Mainly because I have been away training......

Peas in a bottle
I have joined Garden Organic's Master Gardener scheme and spent last weekend over at Gressenhall for the induction course and to meet the other nineteen new recruits. It was a very enjoyable weekend, I learnt a lot, made new friends and my love of gardening was rejuvenated. Being a Master Gardener is a voluntary post where experienced gardeners go out into their communities to help families or schools or other community groups to grow fruit and vegetables organically. Full details are available on http://norfolk.mastergardeners.org.uk/ I am really looking forward to getting my teeth into this exciting new venture.

Friday 5 April 2013

Music while you work

I don't know if it is tempting providence but I have taken the spade out of the back of the car. It was in there in case I got stuck in the snow. 

The very sunny weather we've been having has made me think that maybe, just maybe Spring is on the horizon. The blustery bitterly cold wind defies this. According to the weather people we have only until the middle of April to wait for warmer weather, if they had said that in November we'd have laughed at them, now it is a relief. It seems we may be exchanging all this lovely sunshine for rain, which of course is better than snow and will stop all the topsoil blowing off the farmers fields. So there is just a small window of opportunity to get the allotment dug over and the ground prepared for sowing all those things which should have been done several weeks ago.
Bottles of peas

With this in mind I have been busy chitting potatoes & sowing pea seeds and hoping that the broad bean seeds will finally wake up. Many gardeners grow their peas in lengths of guttering so that they can be slid into the ground without disturbing their roots. I haven't tried that and thought I'd give it a go this year. However lengths of guttering are not cheap, I'd also need to buy end stops to. Then I'd have to cut them into manageable lengths, usually about 1metre long. I would have to carry them the length of the garden to put them into the car and drive to the allotment and carry them from car to the right bit of allotment. This sounds like a recipe for disaster! I have come up with a shorter, cheaper more portable alternative. I have used 2 litre fizzy drink bottles instead of guttering. Cut off the top and bottom because they are too thick to cut through without some powered device. Cut in half lengthways (if you look carefully there are seams which will act as guide lines), snip small holes in the bottom of the 'gutter', place both halves into a seed tray, pushed close to one end to keep the compost in place. Then part fill with compost, put in about 14 seeds evenly spaced and cover with compost then lightly water. I planted 84 seeds the other day!

The first days digging
I have at last managed to venture down the allotment to do some work, there is a lot to do. I am still waiting for the rotavating to be done but the potatoes are sprouting and I need to get their beds ready. So I got to work with my trusty stainless steel fork, it is like a hot knife through butter. As usual I think I was alone down there, can't see all the plots but I think nobody else had ventured out. Sometimes I am happy just to listen to the birds, if I have company I will chat but quite often I have music playing on my (borrowed) mp3 player. There is quite an assortment of music on it, lots of greatest hits of different decades or driving rock ballads and some sound tracks from films and shows, things to get you moving. To this I have added some of my own favourites. Needless to say it is a good job I am often alone down there as I sing along to the greatest hits of T.Rex.
Cageless fruit cage
Today I started working at quite a speed, one Bolan song per width of allotment, at first anyway. Either I slowed down or the songs were got shorter but it finished up with two or three songs per width! I think it was shorter songs, well it was the earlier acoustic stuff. After an hour of digging I decided to have a breather and so took the netting off the fruit cage, should have done it before the snows I know! I have discovered a new pet hate (along with wire coat hangers and chewing gum) it is plastic netting. The dreadful stuff grabs hold of every twig it can find whenever you try to gather and roll it up. It is also not
Evil netting
very environmentally friendly so I will stop using it in the future. I will not be using the plastic mesh bean supports again for the same reasons. Having had a breather from digging and run out of T.Rex I had a change of genre and went back to digging with renewed (although short lived) energy. I changed to a new favourite, a surprise one too as it is Scottish pipe and drum music! I grew up hating traditional pipes & drums but this is very different full of energy and passion. Check out Clanadonia (http://www.clanadonia.co.uk/) on youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aN1wOQ1u9EA and you will hear why I was revitalised and dancing around the allotment – sorry to the dog walkers who passed by! (Whilst looking for the video clip I've found another band very similar called Albannach, will investigate further....) If I am not singing and dancing along to music I am speaking a foreign language, Italian has made way for Czech which is a very difficult language full of consonants in the wrong places, even saying good morning will be a challenge!
May be edible

I finished off by digging up the parsnips I had missed when I last did some digging before Christmas when I was coming down with 'flu.  
Unruly Lonicera
Back at home I have also been busy pruning. Well there was this Lonicera it was overshadowing the rhubarb and choking a holly tree. It isn't any more! Just look at the pictures, I ran amuck with loppers and a pruning saw and now no more unruly Lonicera.  
Unburied Holly
You may think I'd been listening to some mega heavy metal while I did this but no, it was a long planned attack and took very little time so no music was used. The huge Spirea billardii triumphans has been cut down ready for reducing to a manageable size and freeing up some more border for me to plant fuchsias!


Well I think I'm going to be quite busy over the coming weeks, hopefully I'll have time to keep up the blog. I don't think anybody has noticed that I didn't post anything last week! Phew!