Sunday, 2 September 2012

September holidays.

01.09.12:

August Bank Holiday all over with, disappointment with the weather coped with, and onto the last weekend of our holiday... last push for making a difference before we have to go back to work...

Saturday 1st September: despite the forecast for reasonable weather, it was windy, dull and not an inspiring day for creating stuff. But after a visit to the builders yard we returned with a car full of timber... and Sean was ready to start fencing...

















First was the structure on the left of the picture above - 3 new and 2 uprights that we found in the allotment - linked with planks for stability (and to keep the soil on our plot and stop it sliding next door) ready for the wire & raspberry bushes. Hopefully the ones we rescued from the patch of weeds will survive into next year...


Next was the fence at the bottom of the plot - we seem to have lost several feet of our plot which had slid down to next door's garage. None of these plots seem to be straight or level - and ours is particularly wonky!!! So, here's Sean measuring the gaps and the planks...



















At the end of Saturday... Structures built and waiting for another de-weeding before planting up the raspberries, and the gooseberry bushes we rescued. Sean's on his way home...
















Last photo of the day as we leave... the fence is set deliberately at this interesting angle!!
Jobs for tomorrow - de-weeding and planting...


















02.09.12:

Sunday 2nd September: sunshine and much better weather for inspired gardening...
Weeding, digging, planting, and watering done... and by the end of the day...

Raspberries planted, watered and cut back.

All fruit and veg watered

Weeded, leveled out and gooseberries planted.

Left: pile of weeds; Right: Sean's retaining fence and gooseberries.

The view of the allotment from the mound of weeds on our neighbour's plot.
At last: time for Sean to sit down and survey his fabulous fences!!!


Monday, 27 August 2012

Bank Holiday Monday: 27.08.12

Bank Holiday - great weather for getting out in the garden/ allotment and having a BBQ? No, not today. Great weather for measuring up, pricing up wood for making things, & sitting inside updating the blog!!

So, what have we been doing in the allotment over the last few weeks?

12.08.12:
















Since the last pictures of the peas, beans & broccoli/ cabbages that we brought over from the back garden - most of these aren't doing so well - possibly the birds or slugs have got them, or it could just be that ripping them up & re-planting somewhere else isn't the best thing to do...
In the picture above, you can also just see the gooseberry and raspberry bushes we transplanted from the side area on the left - hoping that Jane hasn't done the same with these, and they survive enough to give us fruit next year!!!!
The trailer was also really useful - given that it would probably have taken 15 years to incinerate the rubbish and weeds dug out so far! - throwing stuff in there was so much quicker!!!






















End 12th August - Sean had done a fantastic job with the ground where we're planning to put the compost bin: thousands of metres of nettle roots... all in the trailer...

19.08.12:
















Yeah for Gordon and his rotivator attachment!!
After digging the 6 beds by hand, we decided to take one of our neighbours up on his offer of rotivating a big area of the allotment still left - he couldn't get to the other bit due to the big trailer being in the way.
So, next bit if the experiment - hand-dug or rotivated - which will produce most weeds?

However, it did make us think again about the direction we're going to plant in...

Didn't get much more done that weekend... Jane had been planting in the garden & hurt her knee - gardening injuries led to the pub...

25.08.12:
Back on track this weekend:

















Sean likes his strimmer. We forgot to take photos last time Sean strimmed. On Saturday he decided that the weeds in next-doors allotment were getting too high and starting to seed... so needed to go...





















Another present from our neighbour, Winter caulis - Sean decides to plant in the other direction - not strictly in a straight line, but given that nothing else is yet straight...

















Sean looks so proud!!...

















26.08.12:
Just yesterday... at the beginning of the day we decided to tackle the gooseberry bushes & couch grass. Even though the poison & strimmer had made a big dent in the area, there was nothing else to work than old-fashioned digging...

















By the end of the day, & several bags of weeds/ roots later...

















Starting to look good.... next project is the area on the right of the picture below...

















However, back to the information at the top... it's Bank Holiday Monday... Why did we think we might get more work done? It's raining, cold & windy...

But we've started pricing up wood to make support structures for the fruit bushes...

Monday, 6 August 2012

Not strictly allotment news...

Just thought I'd add a post about why we haven't done very much since the last post.  It's been a few hectic weeks until last weekend, which was the first chance we had in some time to actualy get down to our garden.

The reason why we've been so busy is our preperation for the Gateshead flower show.  It's something we do every year, initially just so we could get cheap entry to the show to buy cheap plants and so on, then the competitive spirit took over.  Took well over and we became flower show competitors proper, getting all anxious to see if we'd won anything and everything.  Problem was we won something that first year and thats what got us hooked.

This year we both entered phgotgraphs, metalwork, paintings oil for Sean and watercolour for Jane.  sean entered beer, Jam and believe it or not a sweetpea arrangement.


Winning at flower arranging at least it's first from three rather than second and the only entry


Proof positive that I make a canny bevvy - first prize and best in comepetion


My 1st prize metalwork entry Jane got 2nd place.




My 3rd prize metalwork entry




Meeting the Mayor of Gateshead to receive my award




Look a video with an image of my beer and me name n evrything


Pleased as punch or what, my certificate and Diamond 'silver salver' for my best in show beer.
to see Jane's entries go to Janey's thoughts

Now its back to gardening and making food.

Sunday, 5 August 2012

We now have plants in the ground!

At last we have things,  green planty things in the gound in our allotment, and not just weeds either.  Sean built three sturdy frames from Bamboo and string, this now has bean and pea seedlings at their feet.  Jane also planted out either brussel sprouts or caulis - we definately know they are a brassica of some sort - pictures to follow - perhaps someone out there can identify the plants from the leaves - we can't. Whatever we'll eat whatever they produce.  Finally from our greenhouse, to save  what was left from slug/snail oblivion we planted out our courgettes, one seedling already had a flower on it, they desperately needed planting out.

One of our friendly and helpful  neighbours kindly provided us with some spring cabbage seedlings so they went into the ground as well.


The other thing we did was build our galvanised metal garden bin type  incinerator, with the intention of burning our 20 bags of weeds, roots and dug up potatoes.  Well we managed to get through one bag in 6 hours of burning, not exactly efficient, we may have to get the council to come around and take the rest away.  Something else to arrange this week.


How it started today
Getting the pea n bean frames built




Getting the fire started
only singed most of the hairs off
from my arm - maybe less petrol next time





probably the safest place to watch Sean 'tend' the fire


Now its raining, so its coats on and
get building




Jane being arty with the 
camera, but peas n beans all planted out



So there it is all planted out, still  two spare beds
so will be planting out more next weekend and making more beds




Sunday, 29 July 2012

End July...

The end of July... where did the month go??

Despite planning to do lots of work on the allotment this month, we've been faced with quite a bit of weather, finishing off entries for the Gateshead Flower Show, and having to do stuff for work....

But we're still progressing at a slow pace...

Sean's got a couple of new toys to play with... a petrol strimmer which has proved very useful... and a couple of things that we're yet to try out - an incinerator for the weeds, and a post-basher-in!

We've gathered more gooseberries so Sean's working on perfecting his jams, and we've been given onions, a lettuce and more fresh eggs from our kind and helpful neighbours...

Not many photos... just our growing number of bare patches... but each time we look there are more weeds!!!

Sean weeding & 4 bare patches...

Increased to 6 patches... just waiting for planting!
So, onwards and upwards... plans to plant green stuff over the next few weeks & clear more areas of weeds. We're also going to get rid of as much rubbish in the white bags as possible - composting (once we've found, bought and installed an appropriate compost bin) or burning as much as we can, and hoping the Council might collect the un-recyclable waste...

Monday, 9 July 2012

Day 3: 8th July

Second weekend... it's been really rainy... like really rainy!!!
Only time to do one day's work...

So as Sean started to 'treat' the weediest end of the plot, Jane continued to turn over the patch dug last weekend, and take out even more roots and weeds. Starting to dig the second patch turned out to be too much for weak digging muscles and a blunt spade...


To treat or not to treat? That is the question.

So we were faced with the perennial question faced by all new allotmenteers. Do we use poison to get rid of the weeds or do we spend months of backbreaking work to dig the little buggers out?

I'm afraid we wimped out and decided to treat with glysophate. We consulted books, Internet blogs, forums, people on the allotment and that bloke down the pub. The only thing we worked out for sure was that each person you ask will give you a different opinion, some will be blazé and assure you 'yeah just stick loads of poison on there, it'll be fine' to other people with their holier than thou opinions who believe that you shouldn't even weed, 'as like all plants have like a total right to life dude' to others who suggest a non poison dig for England, orbanic or broke, cover it with carpet etc attitude. We figured we don't have forever as we both work, digging is very very tiring and time consuming, plus we want to grow something this decade. We treated half the site and will dig half. Do an experiment, see which will be best for future weed suppression. We'll let you know how it goes.

Hard work and time for a sit down... made all the better by having a lovely flask of coffee!














Before long the sun came out...














And time to dig again... third patch...

















But it is starting to look like we've buried the neighbours!!!!














Actually, we have met several of the neighbours today... mainly really helpful suggestions about how we can get rid of the weeds, and reminders that it's OK to take our time...
However, we suspect that maybe there's some doubt that we'll actually get the job done...
But at the end of the day we were offered the opportunity to pick several bushes of ripe gooseberries... although we ended up with lots of scratches and nettle prickles, we've now got a bagful of fruit ready for jamming... and all without planting anything yet!!!

So, the end of another week... slow progress, but progress made!





Wednesday, 4 July 2012

Day 2: 01.07.12

1st July.

July already??!! The difficulty in getting the plot this late in the year is that there's no time to clear the site of weeds and then get things planted at the right times.
We're so wanting to get the plot producing something other than the weeds!

Somewhere under the nettles, couch grass and that sticky stuff are fruit bushes... and under the part-strimmed weeds and nettles is some great soil.









At the beginning of the second day... fruit bushes to the left of the picture, and evidence of the great soil where the shed used to be...











Sean digging...













You can just about see Jane behind the bushes... cutting back the grasses and nettles.
In the background you can see the standard of allotments we are aspiring to...










End of day 2: Sean's little bare patch and Jane's trimmed bushes!!!!









Oh... so much more to do....