
Allotment Potato Beds, Raised Beds and February Tasks
We spent ALL Friday and ALL today at the allotment, and I have to go back tomorrow too – although only for plot inspections with Site Representatives, not for actual allotment work.
The thing is, I’m cream-crackered! On Friday, before we went to the allotment, I planted out the Babbington’s Leeks in the greenhouse. Once we got to the plot we dug the potato bed over again, Himself raked the bean and pea bed, and I dug compost and some sand into the two raised beds which seem to be pure clay. We planted potatoes in tyres on 235 and 201, on the basis that while it may not be organic, it’s at least environmentally friendly to use up some old tyres in this fashion – and it’s supposed to get you your earliest new potatoes up to three weeks earlier than other methods because as long as you keep one empty tyre above the height of the haulm, there won’t be any frost damage to the plant.
Today, while Himself planted carrots in one raised bed, having built a nifty fleece-covered lid for it too, I planted the Jerusalem artichokes that Janet very kindly gave us yesterday. We hadn’t planned anywhere for them, so it was a swift decision to stick them along the fence by the thornless blackberry. Then we marked out the herb and simples garden (sounds posh, but actually it’s the size of two broom cupboards!) because Ray had given the Association some lovely wallflower plants for any plotholder who wanted them, and I’d taken a nice big clump, before remembering that they needed to go in yet another area of completely untouched plot.
I came home and fell asleep on the sofa! If this good weather carries on, I shan't be able to cope. Mind you, I can't afford any more time off work either, so perhaps that will stop us working ourselves to shadows. Although we've still got to plant sweet peas, marigolds, tomatoes, leeks ...
Labels: allotment-beans, allotment-carrots, allotment-flowers, allotment-horticultural-fleece, allotment-leeks, allotment-potatoes-in-tyres, allotment-raised beds, allotment-seeds
Posted by The Allotment Blogger on Saturday, February 21, 2009
My Little Plot
Stay up to date with the latest Allotment Blogger posts by subscribing to our RSS feed.
Allotment Gardener RSS Feed
Latest Posts
- Alpine Strawberries, Raised Beds and Ruminations
- Allotment Perennials
- Seeds, Awards, Ice, Parquet
- Chitting potatoes and rescuing frozen crops
- Seedy Sunday - allotment bargains!
- I hate those meeces to pieces
- More Celeriac
- Sowing Celeriac
- Allotment work is never done
- Birds and Brassicas
Get in touch
Have a question? Send it to:
allotmentblogger [at] gmail.com
Browse the archive
- June 2007
- July 2007
- August 2007
- September 2007
- October 2007
- November 2007
- December 2007
- January 2008
- February 2008
- March 2008
- April 2008
- May 2008
- June 2008
- July 2008
- August 2008
- September 2008
- October 2008
- November 2008
- December 2008
- January 2009
- February 2009
- March 2009
- April 2009
- May 2009
- June 2009
- July 2009
- August 2009
- September 2009
- October 2009
- November 2009
- December 2009
- January 2010
- February 2010
- March 2010
- April 2010
Links
- Gardening Shop
- Composting Instructions
- At Last I've got my Plot
- Down on the Allotment
- Cottage Smallholder
- Vegmonkey and the Mrs.

3 Comments:
Just reading your post makes me feel tired! It will be worth it though, just wait until you get the first harvest.
I have really enjoyed reading your blog - and will continue to do so
Marigolds are for pest eradication, right?
Why sweet peas?
And I have a problem. I thought because I was by the sea, the salt air was pretty much controlling white butterfly, but I've planted brussel sprouts and they're getting hammered by something - I think white butterfly; holes all through them. I've got them planted amidst silver beet, and peppers, which have nothing attacking them at all. The whole point of growing veges is that I want organic, so spraying is not an option. Any suggestions? I've heard perhaps soapy water, but I can't see how that could be a permanent solution.
Post a Comment
<< Home