
New allotment tasks: finding room for beans and herbs
Note the word ‘was’. As you can see, the most notable feature of the three beds, at present, is a bean wigwam. They are borlotti beans and while I love them dearly, they are definitely neither a herb nor a plant used for making toiletries. What they are, is extra. Extra beans, because we got a 100% germination from the seeds. And you can’t throw them away can you?
I thought we could give them away, but Himself sniffed at this, pointing out that we’ve already given away kale, tomatoes, rhubarb, alpine strawberries and chicory. Himself has a bit of a thing for beans, I think. A Jack and the Beanstalk complex perhaps? Anyway, he saw that the central herb bed, which is meant to become a home to lavender and borage and possibly lovage (very good for both the digestion and the complexion apparently, as well as making a lovely liqueur) and into it went the beans! There are more beans (Cherokee Trail of Tears) next to the sweetcorn too, but more of them anon.
So, for this summer at least, I’ve lost my central herb bed. The triangle nearest the path at least has some nasturtiums, marigolds and wallflowers in it, while the one closes to the fence has Love-Lies-Bleeding, dill and sage, so he can’t plonk vegetables into either of those (or at least I don’t think he can) but I can see that we’re going to spend the next few weekends arguing about finding places to put all our overstocks: I want more space for leeks, he wants more space for cabbages, and so on … It could get nasty in the allotment blogger household!
Labels: allotment-beans, allotment-herbs, allotment-summer-crops
Posted by The Allotment Blogger on Monday, May 18, 2009
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3 Comments:
First time I've encountered herb wars...
How close are you to your allotment?
I only ask because for me the chief advantage over growing herbs is them growing close to the kitchen so I can just pop out and easily get what I want while cooking. If they were a long way away, I probably wouldn't use them so much.
When we go away I take a selection, but herbs only last a few days in the chiller.
Herb wars could lead to herbicide eh, Linda?
You're right to ask Mark. I grow herbs outside the back door that I use every day, but the ones I want(ed) to grow at the allotment were more rarely used ones that I might harvest once a year and dry or use to make bath salts or cosmetic preparations. Still, doesn't matter now, or at least not until next year!
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