
Rain starts play
Our clayish soil is like terracotta – once it gets dry you can’t get a fork into it. Where we’ve already double dug, and especially where the spuds have been, it’s fine, you can turn it even when it’s bone dry, but the undug part of the allotment, where it’s full of grass and perennial weeds, is literally impenetrable. Our Jerusalem artichokes finally flowered and they do a good job of breaking up the soil too, but they are getting attacked by thistles.
So this rain will help. I shall dig up the old strawberry bed this week, and put all the old plants out to compost. Then the new strawberry plants will go in a raised bed that’s already prepared. But we’ve given into circumstance and will have the top quarter of the plot, that we never got to this year, strimmed and then rotovated. I’ll cover it with weed suppressing membrane and plant through it in the spring – courgettes and squashes will do fine there and planting through the membrane means we can get some value out of the ground while still keeping the weeds underground and under cover so that they weaken. I know it’s the fool’s option to rotovate, but with half the plot still to dig by hand, I know I’m just not going to get to the wasteland unless I give in and go for mechanised assistance.
Labels: allotment-jerusalem-artichokes, allotment-rain, allotment-rotovating, allotment-soil, allotment-swedes
Posted by The Allotment Blogger on Tuesday, October 6, 2009
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3 Comments:
don't be too dis-heartened that you are having to go the rotavator route..it happens to the best of us!!
excuse my ignorance... what is wrong with rotovating? it seems like an effective way to deal with larger areas rather than digging over by hand..
In my opinion you are not right. Let's discuss. ciallis facts online price Do you want a fresh joke from net? What did one worm say to another worm? I know a restaurant where we can eat dirt cheap!!
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