
Allotment planting February
I also transferred two barrows of lovely manure from the heap outside the shop to the bed for our first early potatoes – it’s a pretty long walk with a barrow so two a day is the most I can manage. I’ll need six barrows for the firsts, seconds and maincrops, so I’ll do two a weekend, and still have a couple of spare weekends to dig it in before I have to think about planting the first earlies.
In the greenhouse we’ve started off Feltham First and Meteor peas in toilet roll inner tubes (aka anti-mice devices), a tub planting of Nantes carrots which I’ll hope to be harvesting as baby salad carrots in six weeks time, and two trays of Elephant leeks for transplanting into pots when they are two inches tall, and then again to the plot a little later on. All in all it’s been a productive weekend!
Labels: allotment-carrots, allotment-leeks, allotment-peas, allotment-shallots
Posted by The Allotment Blogger on Monday, February 8, 2010
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5 Comments:
wow...very productive...I managed to buy my seed potatoes and had the intention of putting manure on the allotment this weekend...but it was freezing fog so I decided to wait just a little longer....god I long for spring!!
I've never grown shallots before, but I've got some waiting to go in for this year. I didn't realise that they had to be sown so early. I've heard of some people starting them off in modules in the greenhouse until they've started to shoot.
just planted Golden Gourmet myself before the freezing conditions this week - typical! I did post photos on my blog and you're right they're not very interesting - haha live and learn!
Thanks Tanya, I do feel productive, but the weather seems to be conspiring against me again!
Jo, I've never tried module planting for shallots, but I assume it would be fine - the saying with shallots is 'plant on the shortest day, harvest on the longest' so that's planting on 21 December, ideally, and harvesting on 21 June.
Damo, I went and had a look, the photos may not be very exciting but the shallots look great! I agree with you that raising the soil a little and making sure onions, shallots and garlic get good sun in winter is crucial to good cropping. I'm interested to know why you want smaller onions as well as large ones though - do you cook them whole?
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