Money Monday

Best to start off as you plan to go on, right?

Target for this week is to have a no spend week – which should be relatively easy to accomplish.  There’s more than enough food in the house for 3 meals a day and snacks, I’ve got no pressing items I need to purchase and if I get a move on I can pack a lunch for today. Plus a business contact is offering a free lunch on Wednesday!

Tonight’s task will be to review my budget. I’ve had one for the last couple of years – I may not always live entirely within it – and the cash pot tends to wander off due to lack of attention, but broadly speaking I know where the money goes…or at least I think I do.

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To commit or not?

I’ve spent a lot of time over the last few weeks reading blogs and websites about de-cluttering, minimalism, sustainability and frugality.

None of these things come naturally to me.  One look at my flat in London and my small cottage in Wales reveals I’m an inveterate pack rat. I keep things because “they might come in useful one day.”   It’s an added peril when you’re a keen gardener and a dabbler in crafts from sewing/knitting/crochet to jewellery making and DIY – add to that a weakness for cookery and gardening books plus a scf-fi/fantasy reading habit and an 30 year investment in genre TV shows and you can see where this is heading.  There’s a limit to how much stuff you can hang onto and when “one day” may be!

Continue reading

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Planting rhubarb and flowers

In between the apparently endless deluges of rain we have had a few fine days and today was one. So back down to the allotment with a giant amount of Things To Do some of which you can see below:

2014-02-16-to-plant

What we have here are:

  • stronger stakes to mark the plot boundary
  • edibles to plant including rhubarb and shallots
  • pretty things to plant including bee friendly summer flowers and wildlife plants
  • there was also manure which needed to be dug in

So once again here we are with the before pictures. This is the main part of the plot where the individual beds will go.

2014-02-16-before-1

Dug over roughly before Xmas, then again a couple of weeks ago. If you peer closely you can see there are still quite a lot of bits of flint and stone in there which will have to come out.

There’s absolutely no way to get them all at once, or in this case even after a third dig and sift. I’m pretty sure I’ll still be pulling them out next year and the year after!

The plan for today was to mark out some beds and get the bags of yellow horse/mushroom manure spread and lightly forked into the soil.

This is the opposite side of the allotment.

2014-02-16-before-2

The two mini beds up at the top continue to survive the constant battering rain and high winds.  The onions and garlic are looking a wee bit worse for wear but still growing away. And the cunning plan of putting a bag of manure on top of the compost bin has worked to keep it in place and stop it blowing across the plot!

The plan here for today was to finally plant up the small bed at the bottom left of the photo.

Eventually that path will have the weeds and stones removed, be properly compacted and have a thin layer of bark chippings laid to mark it out.

Most of the afternoon later and this was the result:

2014-02-16-plot-from-the-back

All the stakes marking the plot boundaries are in.  Next time the plan is to paint the top of these white and write my plot number on them.

Two beds marked out, manure dug in and paths between them compacted and covered with bark chippings.

Bed three is marked out but I ran out of energy to dig in manure so just dumped it on top and spread.

Down at the front end of the plot some planting has been done and that can be better seen in the pics below.

2014-02-15-herbs-shallots

This is the final one of the mini beds (the three small beds which run down one side of the plot). The first two were planted before Xmas with red and white onions and two different types of garlic.  The third and final one has been planted with:

  • Shallot Jermour (in the area where the three bamboo stakes are)
  • rhubarb ‘Timperley Early’ in the bottom left hand corner near the wooden stake
  • herbs – the bushy green plant in the top left is a thyme, there’s a golden thyme in the top right with a sage plant between the two thymes. Coming down the right hand border is Purple sage, parsley and silver thyme.
  • the middle bit is the wildflower section with a couple of cone flowers, a self heal, a couple of ox eye daisy’s and two night flowering catchfly.  They may be planted too close together but I can always move them next year.

2014-02-16-foxgloves-poppy

The front part of the main bed still needs more prep work before it can be properly planted but I had bought a couple of plants I wanted to get in so I’ve planted up the corners.

Again the very bottom left hand corner has another rhubarb raspberry red.  Arranged around it are a couple of foxgloves and a poppy.

You can just about see the opposite corner of this bed in the middle of the photo at the top which has two poppies and a foxglove.

The rest of this bed will be planted up with bee friendly flowers so anyone walking along the main path on the right sees the flowers and behind them the main veggie beds.

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Allotment ground preparation

A fairly sunny and, once you started working, warm day meant an afternoon at the allotment for a day dedicated to ground preparation.  Chance to see how the area I dug over before Xmas had held up against all the rain and try and tackle that last bit of brambles near the main path.

This is what it looked like at midday (left image from the back to the front of the plot) right pic from the front looking to the back.

As you can see everything has held up relatively well – no flooding, no standing water, soil not too wet and not a huge amount of regrowth.  By 3:30 to 4pm (ish) I managed to get it to this:

Went home satisfied if a wee bit aching but at least the bulk of the brambles are gone, and a whole load more stones and flinty bits removed! Was able to head home feeling productive and in need of a decent, hot, soak in the bath!

Some of the stones dug out (left) and the onions and garlic holding on (right).

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Soft fruit planting

Just a quick visit to the allotment today to pop in and plant up some soft fruit. It was a gorgeous sunny day and too good an opportunity to miss for a snap like this:

sunshine-sahdow

The soil has taken a bit of a battering from all the rain in December/early January, but wasn’t too wet to work at least a little. And amazingly enough the onions and garlic have survived even if they’ve also taken a bit of a hammering!

So having  checked that everything had survived, and that the compost bin or large bags of compost had not gone walkabout in the gales it was time to plant the most recent purchases.   I had a moment of weakness in Homebase and ended up buying 4 soft fruit plants since there were only £5 each.  The haul stands at:

  • Ribes nigrum  ‘Ben Lomond‘ – blackcurrant  – self-fertile and fruits within 2 years (harvest July-Aug)
  • Ribes rubrum ‘Jonkheer van Tets‘- redcurrant  – self-fertile and fruits within 2 years (harvest July-Aug)
  • Rubus idaeusGlen Clova‘ – raspberry – self-fertile and fruits within 2 years (harvest June-July)
  • Rubus idaeusAutumn Bliss‘ – raspberry – self-fertile, fruits in first year (harvest Aug-Sep)

They’ve been popped into the bottom border of the allotment along the narrow path separating my plot from the one behind.

fruit-plus-manure

Productive hour or so and then time to head home!

 

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