Saturday, 31 December 2016

Looking back on the allotment 2016



We went to the allotment today, the last day of the year. It was good to get down there to do some work. We haven't been to do jobs since the middle of November, just to pick vegetables. It was a bit dull and dreary at first, but we did get a trickle of sunshine later and some blue patches in the sky. We took some lunch and as we sat at the table eating our lunch we thought about the past year and what had changed.

This time last year we were busy clearing our daughter Helen's allotment ready for the new tenants to take it on and I remembered the shock of finding a dead chicken in the manure bin! That had come from the plot behind--poor chicken, we don't know how it got there. Now we just have  the one plot to look after it has been so much easier. Read about plot 10b here

We acquired two greenhouses early in the year and I have so much enjoyed growing things in there and we are now enjoying eating the chutney made from the tomatoes and chillies.

The wildlife have enjoyed our allotment this year. We had frog spawn and tadpoles in our new pond and  I rebuilt the bug hotel which was falling down. The flowers have been great especially the sweet peas.

Anyone who gardens or has an allotment will know that you have good years and bad years for crops. So some things have done well and others not. After several years trying to grow celeriac without success I have decided not to bother growing it again. But one new veg I would like to try growing is flower sprouts.

Most of the fruit has done well, we are still eating the apples which are stored in the shed, the freezer is groaning under the weight of the rhubarb and I have had blueberries for breakfast.  Strawberries and gooseberries keep us going in jams through the year, they go on my breakfast porridge.

One sadness of the year has been that we lost Ziggy the allotment cat, who came with Helen's plot and then moved to our plot. We miss her, she was always there to meet us very noisily when we arrived and miaowed constantly as we worked, wanting nothing more but food and the occasional cuddle. It's very quiet on the plot now she's gone.

So, after a year of, weeding, mulching, composting, sowing, planting, growing and harvesting, I now look forward to another year. I wish you all a happy and blessed new year, a year of good crops and very few bugs, a year to enjoy sunshine and showers, a year to enjoy your plot or your garden.

Thank you for following me.







Saturday, 24 December 2016

Through the garden gate in December




I prepared this blog a couple of weeks ago and with all the busyness of Christmas, didn't get around to finishing it. So as it's about things I have been doing in the garden in December I decided to publish it as this month's 'Through the Garden Gate' post, joining with Sarah at Down by the Sea.

There's not been much gardening done in December except to sweep up leaves and cut back the odd plant which has got messy. But I've had lots of fun doing other things.

Christmas is a busy time,  I love all the sparkle and glitter, it just seems to brighten up this dark time of year, not just in the house but also in the garden.


I've always enjoyed making my own evergreen door wreaths at Christmas. I put one on the front and one on the back door. But in the last two or three years I have felt inspired to decorate the garden too. I have loads of foliage available in the garden and at the allotment. There are seedheads, moss, twigs, berries and many other things freely available.  So I have been making use of them.


I got a few ideas from our December visits to RHS Harlow Carr who decorate the greenhouse and summer house with rustic stuff, but who also add quirky things like hanging big baubles from trees and twiggy stars from the pergola.



So this year I have made twiggy wreaths wrapped in moss and  berries and hung them on the garden gates and the shed. I have also arranged pots of seasonal colour on the garden table and potting benches.  I made stars and hearts out of twigs to hang from the apple tree and other places.  And I have hung big red baubles  from the apple tree too.


I am expecting that the berries will all be eaten by the birds, but that doesn't matter they can have a feast for Christmas. Storm Barbara arrived here in the north yesterday and this morning I spotted a bright red shiny bauble on the lawn which had been blown off one of the stars in the apple tree. I'm hoping for some calmer weather soon.

Thank you to all who follow and comment on my blog I wish you all  a happy and peaceful Christmas.



Saturday, 17 December 2016

Hyacinths at Christmas


 It seems ages ago that I potted up the hyacinth bulbs for flowering at Christmas. It was at the beginning of October and once I'd planted them, I put them away in the shed where they would be cool and dark and almost forgot about them. Occasionally when I was rummaging about in the shed I remembered them and checked to see if they needed watering. They always looked no different to when I had first potted them up.

But then about three weeks ago I checked them again and amazingly there were pale yellow shoots poking through the compost. I brought them into the house and following instructions on various gardening web sites, I put them where they would get some light but still be cool. After a week the pale shoots had turned green and were looking really healthy.


Some of them I give to friends for Christmas presents, others go to family. The rest of them go in my front porch on the windowsill or the table, and decorate the porch for Christmas. I cover the top of the compost with moss, collected from the garden, and I put sparkly gold twigs in the pots which look good at Christmas but provide support as the hyacinths start to grow taller. The hyacinths are white so with the gold twigs are a good seasonal colour. I'm not sure that they'll be in flower for Christmas, but they won't be long after.



Some of my friends say that it is easier to just buy them from the shops at this time of year, they are quite inexpensive. But I love the growing process.  The waiting and watching, the excitement of those green shoots appearing and the knowing that this was something that I have nurtured. This is all part of the magic of Christmas.




Monday, 12 December 2016

Grey days and a muddy plot




 The days are shorter now and are often  grey and gloomy. We've not been down to the allotment much recently, being busy at home and in the garden. But work has slowed down and after clearing and manuring some of the beds, it's a matter of waiting until other beds are cleared of vegetables before I can continue to manure and weed.  The shed has been tidied and cleaned out and the greenhouses have been cleared of the tomatoes and chillies and also cleaned out. So everything is fairly ok.


There are  still plenty of vegetables which will keep us going through the winter. There's fennel, leeks, kale, cabbage and beetroot and we go down about once a week to pick what we need.  There are also the onions, garlic and apples which are stored in the shed.



We went down a couple of weeks ago after some very heavy rain to check if the drains were still working and the plot wasn't waterlogged.  We were pleased to see that all was well, but it was quite muddy and I didn't feel inclined to do any work

Winter is the time to catch up with jobs on the allotment and now that the plants in the bog garden have died back I can see that the pond needs sorting out.  The compost bin needs turning but when we were there last week everything was frozen solid so we couldn't do any work or dig up any vegetables. There's an untidy area under the hedge where stuff tends to get dumped. I want to tidy this up and put it to better use. So there is plenty to do when we have more time.

The allotment seems to be having a rest for a while, but once Christmas is over we will be back

Wednesday, 30 November 2016

Through the garden gate--November



November has been quite a month for changing weather. There has been snow, heavy rain, gales, frosty mornings and sunshine too. 

The garden is slowing down now and taking on a different look. There is still plenty of colour about but not from the flowers, they are gone over now. I love the colours as everything starts to fade and turn to yellow and brown, the straw coloured plant stems and blackened flower heads. On the sunny days  there is a lovely golden, mellow look to the garden.


Some might think the garden looks untidy, but I love it like it is. It all takes on another sort of beauty especially on those frosty mornings we have been having in the last week.



The leaves are falling everywhere--over the borders, blowing across the lawn, covering the paths and drive, behind the shed and tucked in amongst plant pots. They have all fallen now from the lime tree which hangs over the drive. The oak tree is still clinging on to its golden leaves and probably will do until after Christmas. 



As the garden slows down, then so can I. It's a time to have a rest from back breaking gardening and take things easy.  I enjoy going outside on sunny days to sweep up leaves or tidy up a bit in the borders, but there's no rush, there's all the winter months to get the borders cleared. 
  
The wildlife will benefit from the messiness. As I wander around the garden I often wonder what creatures are hiding underneath  the piles of leaves left to rot in a corner or the seedheads and broken hollow stems in the borders. I know there are some forms of wildlife about as Holly the cat regularly leaves them for me outside the back door!

As usual I have joined with Sarah at Down by the Sea for her monthly Through the Garden Gate slot



Wednesday, 23 November 2016

Along the canal



We've had some bad weather recently and haven't been able to get out much in the garden or go down to the allotment. It's been a case of make the most of any occasional fine spells and get out to sweep up some leaves or tidy up a bit outside.

Last week we made the most of one beautiful sunny, autumn day to go out for a walk along the Leeds Liverpool Canal from Bank Newton to Gargrave.  Gargrave is on the edge of the beautiful Yorkshire Dales and it was a perfect day to admire the scenery.

I like canal walks, because they are flat.  They are also really peaceful and the scenery and wildlife is usually worth looking at.


At Bank Newton there is a group of about four locks close together.  There were a few canal boats moored there and the lock keepers cottage looked very pretty with an equally pretty garden. I love the little gardens that the canal boat owners create.




There was no signs of life on the boats, but there were plenty of  ducks about on the bank.


 

 


Gargrave is a sleepy little place, with the canal, the river, a train station and one or two shops.

 

Gertrude's Gardenalia shop caught my attention. But we were more interested in having lunch first in the Masons Arms. After a good lunch we went back to see what Gertrude's Gardenalia had to offer. There were some interesting vintage things--galvanised baths and pots etc., but the word vintage usually means expensive and so I thought I would stick to picking up the odd bargain from the local car boot sale.

Walking back to the car along the lane towards Bank Newton there were plenty of berries in the hedgerow and I collected rosehips for my Christmas decorations.

Sunday, 13 November 2016

Autumn on the allotment





The days  are getting  get shorter, and colder and our time on the allotment is often dull, damp and misty. But the work is easing up, there is no rush now to get things done, we have all winter. The leaves are falling  from the big sycamore tree.  Every time we go, we find the top of the plot carpeted with with a layer of leaves. So sweeping up these leaves is one job which will keep us busy for a week or two until they have all have fallen. But it will all be worthwhile as they will go in the leaf bin and rot down to make lovely leaf mould for the beds next year.

leeks growing well
As crops are cleared and the beds weeded and tidied up, we are covering the soil with a good layer of well rotted manure.  There are still plenty of vegetables in other beds which will keep us going through the winter--leeks, cabbage, kale, Brussels sprouts, fennel, beetroot, parsnips.


mulched bed

Both the greenhouses are now empty. The tomatoes were finished weeks ago and last week I picked the last cucumber, cut back the chillies and sweet peppers and had a good clean up. I had a lovely box of vegetableto take home that day.

 

Today I pruned the fruit bushes-- blackcurrants, gooseberries and redcurrant and  then covered the bed with a layer of our home made compost. The blueberries got a mulch of pine needles, saved from last year's Christmas tree as they like an acidic soil.

Most of the flowers have gone over now but the Rudbekias just keep on going and every time we go I cut another bunch to take home with me. We have had frost a few mornings recently and the dahlias turned black, so I lifted them and put them in the greenhouse to dry out.

rudbekias
I love this clearing up process as the growing season comes to an end. It's bringing about a time of rest for us, although there are always jobs to be done throughout the winter, but we don't need to go down to the plot so much now. It's a time to look back and a time to look forward. Some crops may not have done well, but there's always another year to think about mistakes made and try again or try something different.

One sad bit of news is that we haven't seen Ziggy the allotment cat for a few weeks now. She was always there to meet us when we arrived demanding food and she followed us around as we worked. She had started off living on Plot 10b which was Helen's plot and when Helen gave up her plot Ziggy came over to join us on Plot 8. She was getting old and we could see that she was quite weary and struggling. We will probably never know what happened to her and where she decided to end her days, but we feel pleased that for the last few years of her life we provided her with food, love and comfort. Read her story here http://margaretspatch.blogspot.co.uk/2013/05/ziggy-allotment-cat.html and here http://margaretspatch.blogspot.co.uk/2015/10/greedy-cat.html




Tuesday, 1 November 2016

Through the garden gate--October

 


October is a lovely month in the garden with so many autumn colours around. The leaves are falling onto the paths and need sweeping up regularly. That will keep us busy for a few weeks yet. There is a Rhus shrub just outside our front window which turns the most beautiful orange/yellow colour in the autumn before it's leaves finally fall.

 

The hostas also turn a lovely yellow colour before they die back. The cotoneaster horizontalis growing against the house wall in the back garden is full of berries now and the birds are loving them.



 I don't do much clearing up in autumn, I have found that leaving the interesting seed heads from plants which have finished flowering and any foliage with good colour gives the  garden a lot of colour and interest for a while.

I have been making up some autumn containers with cyclamen and evergreens for outside the front and back doors. They are looking very good and will keep well through the winter. The pinks and purples go so well with heucheras and many of the small evergreen shrubs which are sold at this time of year in garden centres especially for autumn pots.


October is one of my favourite months, not just because of the lovely colours but also because my birthday is near the end of the month. My potting bench outside the shed which Richard had made  years ago from an old kitchen table was rotting and in need of replacing. I decided I would like a new one for my birthday and after looking at several online, Richard decided he could do better and would make me another one, this time from new wood. I am very pleased with the finished result. I don't think I could have found a better one anywhere else and my potting area is looking much better now. It's all ready for me to work at, but I feel it's too nice to mess up with compost!

 

 Today I am linking with Sarah at Down by the Sea for her monthly 'Through the Garden Gate' post.

Friday, 28 October 2016

Jams and chutneys




There's something really cosy and homely about stocking up the cupboard with jars of preserves to see you through the winter.  You've always got a jar to give to a friend or donate to a charity coffee morning.

Last week I decided to make some spiced apple chutney. I found the recipe in the Sept/Oct issue of Landscape magazine. As with all the chutneys I have ever made, it is easy to cook, but takes hours to make.
I have found that I need to set aside a full day to make chutney. Preparing the ingredients can take ages, then all you do is throw them in the pan, bring to the boil and simmer--but it takes hours to get the point when it is ready. You need to go away and do something else while it is cooking.  Chutney is ready when all the vinegar has evaporated and when you draw a spoon across the surface of the chutney a channel is formed without any vinegar filling it.

If you are making chutney for Christmas it needs to be made about a month or two in advance to allow the flavours to develop. I've never made this recipe before and I did lick the spoon after I had filled up all the chutney jars-- it tasted pretty good.  So I'm wondering if I can really wait for a month before eating it.

I've also made apple and blackberry jam. Click here for recipe. You may notice now that I'm making things with apples. If you've read my last blog,  you'll know why.






Tuesday, 18 October 2016

Harvesting the apples




 We've had a bumper year for apples both on the allotment and in the garden.  In the garden we have an old Bramley apple tree. We've lived in our house for thirty-two years and the apple tree was well established when we moved in, so I don't know how old it is. It has good years and bad years. Last year was probably the worst year ever and we thought it might be because it was old. But it has bounced back. There are apples all over the garden fallen from the tree which will provide some food for the birds in the winter months. The good ones which we have picked from the tree are now stored in the shed.

On the allotment is an apple tree of an unknown variety, it was there when we took the plot on and we have pruned it and looked after it over the last three years. It has rewarded us with an abundance of apples this year. I think the variety is a cox's pippin, it tastes and looks much like it.


With all these apples around I needed a good way to store them. I haven't done well in the past with storing the Bramleys. So I got a number of boxes from the local supermarket. These are the sort which are used for displaying fruit or veg, shallow and made of good strong cardboard. I have wrapped each apple in newspaper and set them out in the boxes so they are not touching. The boxes stack up easily and fit neatly on the shed benches. I'm hoping this will work and the apples will keep well.


All that remains now is for us to eat all these apples. The Coxs aren't a problem, we are eating them an apple a day each. That should keep us healthy. Now the Bramleys need cooking and making up into puddings, jams etc. I have plans to make jams and chutneys.

Monday, 10 October 2016

Tatton Park, Roald Dahl and dream jars



A few  months ago  we visited RHS Harlow Carr gardens and came across the BFG  in the woods. He was moving to Tatton Park for the flower show it said on the information board. Well we didn't go to the flower show so we didn't see him again.  There was a trail for children in the woods and something about bottling dreams which intrigued me. At this point I have to say that I had never read The BFG and if you have then you will know more about it than I did at the time.

The BFG at Harlow Carr
Later on in July I had a message from my daughter who lives in the south of England (We live in the North).  They were taking their children into London to follow a dream jar trail ( all connected to Roald Dahl and the BFG). She informed me that one of the dream jars was to be found at Tatton Park. I wanted to know more, so my other daughter (up here in the north) and children decided that in the school summer holidays we would take ourselves off to Tatton Park to find this dream jar. I was quite excited, not only were we visiting a garden, which is something I love to do, but I was going to find out more about these dream things.

Tatton Park is a really big place, there is so much to see. It is set in 1,000 acres of parkland. There is a working farm with rare breed animals, the Mansion, The Old Hall, the Gardens, shops and places to eat. We couldn't see all of that in one day, so we just visited the gardens. There are 50 acres of garden divided up into different areas, so that took us quite some time to look around. In fact I don't think we managed to cover the whole of the gardens in the day.  One of the areas we did see was the Japanese garden--we weren't allowed into this but could view from the outside--it was a very peaceful  place.


Japanese garden
 We also saw the walled kitchen garden, the topiary, the rose garden. We went through the maze and for a brief moment thought we'd lost the children!

There have been lots of Roald Dahl events going on at Tatton Park  through the year to celebrate his centenary.  Around the gardens was a Roald Dahl Trail with lots of  things  relating to Roald Dahl's books. We didn't always know what they were but sometimes we could guess which book they were from.

We saw a giant chocolate bar and the 10 year old spotted an upside down house. He said he had only read one Roald Dahl book but he seemed to know a lot about the other books. The 12 year old said she didn't like Roald Dahl books. I found that hard to believe, I was getting more interested by the minute and wanted to read some of these books myself.

upside down house

We found the dream jar at the entrance to the gardens. Further on through the gardens, in the woods there was a scene from 'the Twits' with washing hanging on a line, and we came across an old pram in the woods--I'm not sure where the pram fits in to all this.


dream jar
But the best thing of all for me was the fernery. I love ferneries, and this one was especially good, with lots of green foliage, ferns of course and water dripping everywhere. The first thing we saw as we entered was a load of snozzcumbers.

snozzcumbers
At the time I didn't know what a snozzcumber was but it looked quite revolting. If you don't know what a snozzcumber is then read the BFG. Moving through the fernery we spotted lots of other things which were obviously  from Roald Dahl books. And finally there he was--the BFG, hiding in the greenery, almost as tall as the highest tree fern.

The BFG
And amongst the tall ferns high up was a tree with little dream jars hanging from it. I loved it, but what were these dream jars all about I wondered? I had yet to find out.

dream jar tree
We had great fun at Tatton Park,  the gardens are worth visiting anytime, but if you want to see any of the Roald Dahl events check out the website here http://www.tattonpark.org.uk/roald-dahl/events.aspx

The secret of the dream jars has been revealed because I bought myself a copy of The BFG in the shop before we left. If you want to know more, read the book or watch the film.

“Dreams,” he said, “Is very mysterious things. They is floating around in the air like little wispy-misty bubbles. And all the time they is searching for sleeping people.” (The BFG)