Friday, 21 November 2008

New beds

Its a long time since I've blogged anything about the allotment. But its getting into winter properly now, there's not much going on at plot 28a. Apart from....our new raised beds! Its very exciting to finally be putting them in so we can be more organised for next year. 

This was the first one that Seamus and I put in.
We've managed to place a few more now, but it will be a while before they are all in place.



We've had to move the onions and the cabbage and cavelo nero that we'd already put in into the new beds as they were in the way. 
As we're so close to the trees our plot is totally covered by the falling leaves, I've collected 4 bags so far to make leaf mould, but there's a million more to collect!
Its almost like its snowing leaves when its windy...

Sunday, 12 October 2008

October already!









Tanya, Seamus and I managed to all get to the lottie at the same time on the same day..... that hasn't happened for a while. We managed to get through a lot of work clearing the plot, taking out the old bean wigwam, taking out the pumpkin, courgette and cucumber plants. We also cleared more of the new plot that Shelley has kindly lent us.

We harvested masses of jalepenos and the last of the salad leaves. The sunflowers are looking fabulous. And we discovered another frog in the old water container.

As you can probably tell I am still struggling with organising the layout of this blog and one day I will master it, just not today!!!

Can't wait to get all the new veg in the ground and start the winter harvest! Bring it on!!!







Saturday, 27 September 2008

Sunflowers & Slugs




Paulene, me and my dogs went to the lottie this afternoon, it was so lovely the sun had just moved so that the plot was in the shade. We dug some more of the patch that Tanya had started. Something slug or pigeon had been munching our winter brassicas some of them look almost totally stripped of course it was the lovely Italian black kale. So we strung a network of bamboo string and CD's to keep away the birds. I watered all the remaining fruit and veg & Paulene harvested a load of lush veg: runner beans, courgette, cucumber, parsley, salad oh and raspberries yum.
The multi-headed sunflowers are looking lovely so here are a couple of pics.

Monday, 15 September 2008

Newts, squirrels and the late summer harvest


Its been a busy month, we've all been on holidays, its rained a lot, we've harvested a lot, and we've experienced some highs and some lows with our allotment.
Our successes have been the runner beans, broad beans, potatoes, parsley, courgettes, sunflowers, rhubarb, pumpkin, radishes and chard. We've all harvested lots of delicious veg, and personally I've been blanching and freezing like mad, my freezer full of runner beans. I've made delicious beetroot salad, vast quantities of lettuce soup, and I've finally got over my childhood fear of broad beans!
And now to the less successful moments... not so good were the peas, melon, aubergine, cucumbers and sweetcorn.
We were all so looking forward to some gorgeous corn. In fact it was the one thing I really really wanted to grow and eat, to experience how sweet it really should be. Our plants were doing really well and the cobs were forming and getting plump. One day they looked like this:

And the next day this is what we found:


The local $£@!*&^% squirrels had carefully peeled each one and eaten most of our gorgeous corn. We managed to salvage three nearly ripe cobs and so at least we each had one. And they were even better than I expected which made it more disappointing. Next year we'll still grow corn, but in a cage!
We've got in some autumn and winter veg - kale, cavelo nero and cabbage, but the slugs are dining out on the young plants. I've recently seen what a slug pellet does to a slug, and it ain't pretty!! I've been collecting them in bags and chucking them in the bin. Dead slug smells bad too.
We've cleared and dug most of the bit of Shelley's plot that she gave us a month or so ago, we've put most of the autumn and winter veg in there:

We've also got lots and lots of what I think must be newts in the metal water butt. There were loads of these ones about a month ago:


Today I had a look and there were lots of smaller black newts, I caught one in a cup to get a better look and it was very black and had 'whiskers' coming out from below its head. There really are a lot of them in the tank, but I can't identify them from any websites as there don't seem to be any good pictures of baby newts.
We spent yesterday evening eating a gorgeous roast chicken dinner (thank you Seamus!) and looking through catalogues and deciding what we're going to grow next year.
Finally, here's a new pic of our plot, there are gaps appearing again where we've taken out the sweetcorn, broad beans, peas, beetroot and potatoes:

Am looking forward to our first autumn and winter at 28a!

Sunday, 10 August 2008

Heavy rain brings abundance....and weeds!





Seamus and I popped up the lottie in the rain this Saturday to get some goodies for us tea. Good grief it's amazing what a lot of rain can do. Everything is just blooming. Gathered broad beans, runner beans, peas, beetroot, potatoes, salad, courgettes, chard, parsley, radishes and rhubarb. I can't quite believe that we have managed to grow so much in such a short space of time....it's only been 4 months!

The sweetcorn is firming up and the squash/pumpkin/whatever it is is almost the size of a beachball! Even tho the sunflowers went in very late they are really coming on. Am off to Scotland this week and am taking some of our produce up for Mum and Dad to savour. It turns out my paternal grandad, who I never met, loved growing vegetables in his garden in Glasgow, so maybe I get my love of it from him!

Can't wait to see what it all looks like when I get back!


Friday, 1 August 2008

Mini harvest


I haven't been to the allotment for a week and when I arrived today I couldn't believe my eyes. We have beans, courgettes, big fat peppery radishes, cucumbers and a pumpkin that has grown from a golf ball size to a small football in 7 days!


I picked some beans, they were small but I go away on Sunday for 2 weeks and I wanted to taste them before I left. They were delicious. 
I got another yellow courgette from Shelley, and gave her some rhubarb as we still have loads.
I watered everything well and did some weeding, and dug up some potatoes. Some of the peas have given up, probably haven't had enough water, but that's fine because we can take them out and use the space for something else.
Last weekend we took up the carpet from a section of Shelley's plot that she's giving us. I'll take a photo tomorrow and post it. We'll probably put our winter and spring veg there when it arrives.
I made a delicious rhubarb and blackberry crumble tonight, it was so tasty and a gorgeous colour. This is all that was left....

Sunday, 20 July 2008

Potatoes, beetroot and flowers

Spent 4 hours at the allotment today, mostly weeding, drinking coffee, talking to a couple of our neighbours and looking at all the gorgeous flowers. I dug up some potatoes, the leaves were turning yellow with brown spots, is it blight? Who knows. Just to be on the safe side I dug them up and will be having some for dinner tonight.
Shelley gave me some strawberry plants so I put them in where the potatoes had been.

I put some others in pots in case Seamus thinks they can go somewhere else on the plot, otherwise he and Paulene can take them home if they want them, I took four home.
It was quite nice and sunny with enough cloud to give some shade from the heat, and there were quite a few people there today, probably the most I've seen.

Here are some pics from today, a lot are of flowers from our plot and the ones around us.
Courgettes looking good..






Bindweed has such a beautiful flower...

One of our neighbours has some fantastic looking corn. Much further along than ours...

And their chard looks gorgeous too...

I had a visitor today, very cute little bird hung out with me most of the afternoon...


Saturday, 12 July 2008

The sweetest peas


There's no nicer way to eat a pea than to pick a pod in the morning sunshine and eat the peas raw when they're young and sweet. Delicious!
I went to the allotment this morning and sat for a while, amazed how everything had grown so much since the heavy rain during the week. The ground was dark and wet, unfortunately the weeds had benefited too. I spent about an hour weeding, clearing grass and some nastursiums that were crowding the peas and beans.

I thinned some of the beetroot, we really need to thin all of it, but we really don't have any more room. So maybe we'll just have small beetroot instead. 
Some of the peas still aren't doing well, maybe they went in too late? 
Our jalapenos are doing really well, better than the plants I have at home anyway.


















Beans are looking good, they're all climbing high up the bamboo poles and flowering well.


















Here's a photo of nettle mountain! It scares me everytime I look at it...