Wednesday 8 May 2013

Ode to the Mattock

Remember my waxing lyrical about the Mattock?  That marvellous tool that turned potato trench digging into something approaching easy?

Well here is the tool in all it's glory...


Technique - you stand square on to the trench and chop the soil towards you, making a ditch and a mound of earth with which you later cover the potatoes with.  Trust me, so much easier than using a spade.


And for those of you that asked, you can buy them on the Stratford Road in Choices for £13.99... I know!  How good is that!

Seedlings

The name of The Springfield Project's Stay and Play group Seedlings - and also the name of this post as today was all about starting the growing process with 3 things, soil, water and seeds.  Simple.

Since we had to wait to grow seeds as our greenhouse was broken, we thought we would make up for lost time and plant everything we could find!  A great approach to gardening with children by the way - an overspill of enthusiasm and "lets try everything" is better than a slower methodical approach for the under 5's.  It's more fun.

However much fun you make planting up seeds, please don't do what we did and write up the labels in pencil...we now have no idea what we are growing as the marks have rubbed off the labels due to watering them...ophs :-)

We'll be learning plant identification through necessity soon, when the seed leaves pop up and we are frantically trying to work out our red onions from our marigolds...can't be that hard!



Pleased with getting some seeds planted up and a 2 weeks later seeing them come up - all this and a complete greenhouse, things are looking good.

Time for some serious gardening...

So far this blog has been mostly about what happens when you try and set up a community allotment from scratch in about 6 weeks.

Now to the serious business of growing things - but what to grow exactly and can you just follow the instructions on packets and grow food?

One of the greatest parts of being on a community allotment is that you can ask these questions and people will stop, spend the time of day with you and give you their honest opinion.

This is great!  Because above all gardening is a social activity - not meant to be done in isolation!  So with the advice and general consensus of the plot holders I set about digging potato trenches for my sack of Kestrel potatoes.

 No one told me just how hard digging a potato trench is, especially when you need about 20 of them all 18ft long....Still thanks to Jim who introduced me to the mattock a serious bit of gardening kit.

I can't recommend it highly enough. It takes a significant effort to wield it in earnest  but boy if you have the energy it makes potato digging a piece of cake.  I'll take a picture of it next time and introduce you to it!

I have a new like-minded friend on the allotment - Leona has joined in on a Wednesday recently and we've been planning the next crops and planting the potatoes together.  Need to thank Piper here for her excellent contribution to potato sowing.




Smash!

And then the glass broke....   such a fragile thing a glass house in the middle of what is essentially a field.


At last a reason to be joyful for the delayed planting season...as this happened in late March I thought I'd have plenty of time to fix it.  And surely it isn't hard to find, buy and cut the glass to fit!  Actually it's not that easy but that is another story.  The outcome of my broken greenhouse was:

1. A small delay in planting up seeds
2. A chance for me to speak to almost everyone on the allotment site about it!

The outcome was really rather good in terms of community - I feel like I am part of one now.  So thanks to that rouge gust of wind... and hi to everyone from Knowle Road Allotments who helped me, directed me or fixed the greenhouse.