Allotment – Rose Avenue

This is my original plot at Rose Avenue 7m x 5m to give an overall 35 square metres.

Plot 1a.JPG

The crudely drawn white lines (I have MS Paint and am not afraid to use it) show the boundaries. The black compost bin next to the shed is mine – the shed is not! The freshly dug over bit is where the potatoes are and along the back boundary are a red and white currant, a raspberry and another fruit bush. The herb bed runs along the line from the compost bin to the path. There’s a decent sized lavender and rosemary there plus a couple of sages and mace, thyme and various other plants which should be popping up soon.

 

Plot 1

The bed at the front abutting the path is technically not part of the plot but I decided rather than let it run to couch grass and bramble I’d plant bulbs, wallflowers  and wildflowers there.  The bulbs are pretty much done and the wallflowers just starting to come out.

The dead bit of grass by the bags of manure is waiting to be dug over.  After a 3 year battle I gave up and tackled the brambles and couch grass with some roundup.  So I just need to dig and prep that area.  And do some long overdue edging of the path.

If I decide to keep this plot I may put some raised beds in around autumn.

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Back garden clean-up – update!

Quite a bit more achieved on the great back garden clean-up!

I finally got around to squeezing myself between the Pyracantha and the fire-escape and cleaned up the areas underneath the fire-escape.  I now remember the concrete there is actually a lovely honey colour rather than grim and grey. Though I do still have to paint the fence panel right next to the Pyracantha, the one behind the toolbox and the one right up against the fire-escape railings.  May be a job for this coming weekend – weather permitting.

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I planted some long abandoned and only recently discovered cyclamen in the two small beds next to the deck – there are already a couple of Ajuga repetans in the corner bed with the truncated Acer griseum (it appeared to die a few years ago but is now shooting from the base).  The winter and summer jasmines are also now underplanted with cyclamen and some self seeded Forget-me-nots.

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The pots on the deck and path are chugging along nicely. The lillie and Agapanthus are going strong, as is the Buddleia ‘Buzz’. The slightly overcrowded looking pot on the left had a great showing of daffodils/narcissus and also has three different types of mint growing in it.  And I’ve potted up a a couple of Geraniums which overwintered.  I’ve always struggled to overwinter them well – these two were dug up from some pots at the end of summer and I put them in a large plastic bucket on the fire-escape. I’d intended to replant them before winter set in – but forgot – so they overwintered with just their root balls and sitting in a a bucket which contained quite a bit of water.  Apparently total neglect will ensure in great over-wintering! (Excuse slightly out of focus photo – these were taken at 7:45pm on Sunday and I was a little tired having been up since 5am)!

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The bay (left below) is flowering and the Victoria plum has just finished flowering…

…and I just potted up some more Asiatic lillies which I’d bought in February.

Tasks for the coming weekend (if the weather holds) are:

  1. Finish painting the fence
  2. Scrub the deck and path again
  3. Get a coat of deck oil on the deck
  4. Edge the path with gravel
  5. Put a fresh coat of paint on the boards of the raised bed
  6. Clean and oil the garden furniture (two chairs and a small table)
  7. Add manure and soil conditioner to the two beds on the right hand (shady( side of the garden (one for veg and one for flowers)
  8. Add manure to the vegs beds on the left hand side of the garden
  9. Finish sorting out these pots:
    • an old red hot poker I rescued a couple of years ago and a self seeded Buddleia  both of which will go down to the new allotment plot
    • replant the two strawberry planters and sort out the two green strawberry planters (which are old and need throwing away once the strawberries have been rescued)
    • see if the blackcurrant sage which is in the final large pot survived winter
    • wash and store any plastic pots and other stuff on that bed and then manure it!

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And then I need to finish planting up the herb pots and other pots on the fire-escape!

I’m hoping a final push this weekend will see most of it done (um…or perhaps not looking at that list above!) – but that all depends on how much time I spend down on the existing and new allotment plots.  And I still have to dig out some of the garden decs from the attic – hauls from past Chelsea and Hampton Court Flower Shows!

At least if I don’t get it all done I have time the first week in May – as I have Thursday 5 and Friday 6 off work!

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Potato planting

Today dawned bright and sunny and I have been racing around since 7am.  Some much needed admin paperwork has been done, I’ve viewed a new plot at the allotment site (more in another post), I visited the Transition Town Tooting Community Garden and spent the afternoon on my plot planting ALL the potatoes.

I say ALL the potatoes because once again my enthusiasm ran away with me when I went to the RHS Spring Plant Fair back on 16 February.  Pennards Plants (damn them!) were present with lots of lovely potatoes.  My resolve to not go mad disappeared and I bought lots of potatoes, a small amount of shallots and some more exotic veg.

The potatoes finally made it into the ground this afternoon. So what went in?

  • Rosabelle x 4  – first early – waxy red skins, yellowish flesh, can be used in salads and good resistance to blight and virus Y.
  • Vivaldi x 4 – second early – has up to a third fewer calories & a third less carbohydrate than most other varieties and is a multi-purpose potato (salad, boiled, mashed, baked etc) yellow skin, pale yellow flesh, resistant to scab
  • Blue Danube x3 – early main – stunning blue/purple skinned with bright white flesh and apparently larger potatoes bake well.
  • Vitelotte x 4 – early main – dark blue, almost black skin and dark violet-blue flesh; with a nutty flavour and smell of chestnuts. I grew these a couple of years ago and they are unusual!
  • Pink fir apple x 4 – early main – knobbly pink skinned potatoes, good for later harvest, great in salads
  • Salad blue x 4 – maincrop – another cracking blue skinned/blue fleshed potato also has attractive blue/ purple flowers. Apparently suited to baking, roasting, mash, boiling or chips.

I should probably have spread out the planting over a few weeks but I’m (a) running late on some things and (b) going to be time pressured over the next few weeks so I thought I’d get them all in the ground now. So there we are – 3 rows of potatoes.2016-04-11 Potatoes

And here’s what the plot looks like at the moment.

From the back looking towards the tarmac path:

2016-04-11 Back

The currants are coming back and there’s some rather decimated chard left over. The herb bed is still hanging in and the pile of bags are manure to go on the bit covered in dead grass once I’ve dug it all out.

And from the front – the daffs have all gone from the narrow flower bed (which technically isn’t part of the plot but I figured I’d use rather than have as a dumping ground for stones!) but the autumn planted wallflowers are starting to show as are some of the wildflowers.

2016-04-11 Front

The dead grass is a bit of the plot I’ve never quite managed to finish digging over and it was riddled with brambles which came back with a vengeance the first summer – because Sustainable Merton had rotivated all the plots – so there were a gazillon tiny chopped up bits of bramble root which took off like fury. Having battled with it for a couple of years I gave in a busted out the chemical help this spring. Which as you can see worked! So over the next couple of weekends I need to blitz dig this last third.

Next weekend I want to get some weed supressing membrane down in the bit between the potatoes and the dead grassy bit – because that’s the spot my more exotic root veg will be going into. So I need to warm up the soil a bit before planting them out.

My cunning plan for the year is to have half of this plot planted with root veg which don’t require a great deal of fuss and probably have beans/peas in the remaining section (currently under the grass) while I work on cultivating the second (slightly larger) plot I’ve just taken on. (For a sense of scale this plot is roughly 5m wide x 7m deep or 16.5ft x 23 for those in imperial).

More about the second plot tomorrow!

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March spend

March was the month I took my eye off the ball spend-wise.  On the plus side my spending patterns are consistent, on the minus side a busy month meant I relied far too much on purchasing breakfast and lunch on the hoof from the varied eateries around work which doesn’t help with any kind of economy drive.

Household running costs still modest and show a minor decrease – it’s been getting quite a lot warmer, my heat is not on and although my utilities spend is very modest every little helps. It’s also the time of year when there is no spend on council tax/water as we transition from one year to the next. Proportion will increase next month as these kick back in.

Travel costs back to the more usual 5% of my budget.I buy a monthly travel card which covers all my work and most of my personal travel.  No travel outside the zones covered by the card in March.

Food and household shopping again fairly consistent 10% of my budget spent on food for me and the moggies.May see modest movement once the growing season kicks in!

The breakfast/lunches out jumped by 2% this month. Still remains one area I need to get to grips with. It all adds up to a significant amount over the month which could be better spent elsewhere!

Home and garden looks a bit low and makes me wonder whether I’ve accounted for everything! Then again I think I only bought some pots, paint and gravel boards so it may be right.

Health and fitness spiked because I paid my PT and bought and few bits of kit.

Entertainment dropped again – no film spend this month!March spend

There was an added  bonus this month of a surprise cheque for £1000 from a competition I entered ages ago.  This has gone to pay for my holiday in August (10 days in Sicily for a wedding) and the rest is now in savings for the holiday.

April targets

  • cut back on breakfast and lunches out – both the finances and waistline will benefit
  • restructure of my finances to enable me to kill the loan and credit card debt faster
  • dig out paperwork for potential tax refund
  • sort out some changes with the Land Registry for the registrations for my flat in London and cottage in Wales
  • double check savings fund for August will cover what we want to do when away (car hire, site visits, eating out etc) now that all travel and accommodation is paid for.

Today I’m off to look at a new allotment and do some work on my current plot and garden while the weather is fine.  Update on those later!

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Back garden – post winter clear up day 5

As ever I have massively underestimated the time it takes to do things when you have a tiny garden and no room to swing the proverbial cat.  I’ve spent most of the last few days shuffling pots, garden furniture and wood around like a giant game of jenga so  I can get things done!

The fence has been (mostly) painted, the majority of the pots top-dressed and the fox damage to the fences fixed.

Views as of around 5pm tonight:

01a Into gardenA fresh coat of paint has brightened the fence up. The deck looks a lot cleaner now 12 months of algae have been scrubbed away.  If it’s fine next weekend it will have another scrub and the a good treatment of deck oil.

02 Deck

Close up of the deck and pots.  To the right is a lovely little bay tree which seems happy on the shady side of the garden – it may need potting on next year.  The big pot next to it contains Agapanthus  and the pots either side of that have lillies. On the left hand side in the big blue pot is a Victoria plum  which has been blossoming like mad.  In front of it is another pot of Agapanthus and behind it yet more lillies!

The two small square beds to the far left are where I tend to plant flowers or perennials. The small stump in the back corner is the remains of an Acer griseum which was happy for about 15 years and then died. But it seems to be sprouting from the very base of the stump again. There’s also Ajuga repetans and Alchemilla mollis in there but they seem to have taken a battering over winter.  The second square bed is home to the winter and summer jasmines and here are a couple of tiny clumps of self-seeded  Forget-me-nots. There were other perennials in there but since the foxes had a field day digging it up over winter not sure any of them will come back. Also the boards around the bed have had a fresh coat of paint too!

The two beds in the left hand picture are on the shadier side of the garden.  The bed furthest away and closer to the deck still has some chard (sacrificial plants for the local snail population!) and red-veined sorrel. The nearer bed has perennials and needs top-dressing and weeding – and for me to see if I can identify the perennials from the weeds! Depending on the weather during the evenings this week I may tackle that and also try to get a coat of paint on the boards.

The beds in the right hand picture are where the veg will be – once I’ve sorted out the last few pots (which need to be left where they are until I’ve throughly scrubbed the path and painted the boards)! The pots contain a couple of Buddleia (one grown from a self seeded plant and which will probably end up on the communal allotment plot and the other is a dwarf Buzz). There’s also a blackcurrant sage and two strawberry planters plus – just out of shot – a giant pot full of daffodils and 3 type of mint.03 Rear garden

And here’s a final shot looking back to the fire-escape.  The three pots on the left hand side of the pic contain yet more lillies. There’s a whole load of pots at the base of the fire-esacpe and piled under the Pyracantha that need to be sorted, cleaned and stored or taken down to the allotment for sharing. Under the Pyracantha is a dry bed which needs a good top-dressing and planting up (after I’ve seen whether the Dicentra and Crocosmia have survived). And the fence at the back and under the fire-escape needs painting, plus my tool store (just about visible as the brown back up against the far fence) needs sorting too.

Now I’ve thinned out the Pyracantha I’m hoping to have pots all the way up the stairs again. The last few years I’ve had a couple of the bottom and the rest from the top to about half way down. Currently there’s a little Myrtle bush (just below the bright green pot and watering can) and just above that a giant Oseteosperumum which overwintered.

Alas I’m back at work tomorrow so doubt if I’ll get a huge amount done during the week and it will be a busy weekend but with a bit of luck I’ll get most of the post-winter clearup done and then can think about planting!

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