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Showing posts from April, 2017

Solanaceae Update

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I wrote earlier in the year that I was going to try sowing my tomatoes in three batches. Here are the first sowing and the second lot (Moneymaker and Gardeners Delight) went in the last week of March. I sowed sweet peppers and chili peppers with the first batch back in mid February. The sweet peppers had a good germination rate but I only got 1 chili germinate. So far there's nothing poking through from my aubergines...I'll keep waiting! Given the reduction of growing space from my allotment, and not knowing how far I would get in clearing my patch, I decided to grow potatoes in sacks this year. I'm growing second earlies only and opted for Wilja as these were the very first crop I sowed when I took on my allotment 13 years ago! UPDATE - I forgot to post this blog so to UPDATE... all aubergine are terminated and almost ready to go in the ground in the greenhouse. I have to clear a few more lettuce and spinach to make space. Potatoes have been earthe

3 eggs per day!

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All three are in full lay now. Even with giving some away, 21 per week is still a lot to get through.  One had a bit of an upset tummy (I know not scientifically accurate) last week. She was sick a couple of times, just water, but this is the something chickens are supposed to do. A few massages of the crop and a couple of bowls of my special mix - oats, live yoghurt and some cider vinegar to restore ph balance and beneficial bacteria and yeast - and she was right as ninepence in 2 days. She never stopped laying and was full of life every day so I was happy to let her be. 2 recipes I've tried this week are a cheese, pasta and spinach soufflĂ© and a moroccoan/African inspired dish called Chachouka. Both recipes courtesy of Hugh F-W River Cottage Veg Everyday. A recipe book I'm going to be delving into a lot again this year.

Chickens taking care of the lawn too

Not only are the chickens doing a first class job of clearing my veg beds, weeding form me, breaking down the lumps of soil and fertilizing it...theyre helping the lawn too. Ive built a small moveable pen for them as i cant be letting thwm roam the garden now ive got so many seeds in. Every couple if days i move it around the lawn is into a different veg bed.The chickens dutifully scarify the lawn, pulling out all the moss and at the same time fertilize it for me to boost the grass growth. Chicken manure is used as an organic fertilizer, especially for soil low in nitrogen. Of all animal manures, it has the highest amount of nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium. In trying to recover the lawn and boost the nitrogen in the soil for the grass to out compete the moss, I've found my girls to be a fantastic help!

It's getting busy - rhubarb and spinach galore!

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I can't believe it's only been 6 months since I started work on the veg patch. I'm harvesting rhubarb by the armful. The 4 transplants I've left alone but I have one large clump left in situ which is doing a sterling job! This is the inherited rhubarb, just behind my autumn sown broad beans. This is the one I'm harvesting. These are the four I transplanted from the allotment. I'm not picking these this year while they get their strength up. I read in a magazine last week that Sweet Cicely is a great herb to cook with rhubarb. I'd never even heard of it before. It's supposed to be sweet (as the name suggests) with an aniseed flavour. I brought a small plant online to grow up. It can tolerate shade so it might not be suitable for the herb garden as my herb garden is in quite a sunny spot. I've potted it up and left it in the greenhouse while I decide what to do with it. Sweet Cicely  I usually cook rhubarb by itself or with the z