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Allotments (20)

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Jane Moore (11)
Lila Das Gupta (7)
Adam Pasco (1)
Pippa Greenwood (1)

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Composting

By Jane Moore on 17/10/2008 16:15:42

It may have been a lousy summer for growing many crops but the wet weather bodes well for my compost.It's always 'alright' rather than 'wonderful', unlike the stuff I make at work, which is always lovely: friable, richly dark and full of worms, just


Insulating compost

By Pippa Greenwood on 11/12/2008 15:00:50

.But the downside of the cold weather is that my compost heap has stopped decomposing. The pile of fruit and vegetable peelings and garden waste has shown little sign of decay in the last few weeks. The banana skins turn black very quickly, and the local badgers


Composting waste

By Jane Moore on 21/11/2008 14:33:13

Making good compost has become something of an obsession for me lately. At idle moments, I've found myself contemplating the two heaps on my allotment. Affectionately called 'hedge heap' and 'new heap', I've been considering what else I could add


Compost

By Jane Moore on 18/01/2008 11:29:00

.So this week I'm improving my soil with home-made compost. This seems a good use of my time as I can stop instantly and pack up as soon as a passing shower turns into steady rain (I'm not a wuss really - I get wet enough at work but I get paid for those


Quicker compost

By Lila Das Gupta on 16/10/2009 16:24:44

challenge for the compost 'steward' will be to sort out the compost bins at the allotment (we have 3 at home and plan for another 3 on the plot).  We use one to store brown materials which we have gathered up like bags of leaves and some paper,  the other


Weedkiller in manure: update

By Jane Moore on 27/02/2009 14:44:45

It's this time of year when the allotments become a frenzy of activity. Everyone is digging, composting and manuring like mad. My neighbours Mr and Mrs Ron wait until Easter, then till and plant their three plots within a week. The rest of us just


Growing cut flowers on the allotment

By Lila Das Gupta on 18/03/2010 16:53:15

We've just been allocated more space on the allotment, so we now have a full sized plot. As well as planting many more spuds - which will keep the 'old man' happy - we can also plant the cutting garden my daughter always wanted. Despite


Wasps and wasps' nests

By Lila Das Gupta on 05/03/2010 16:41:05

realised the wasps were coming from the bottom of one of the compost heaps.I telephoned the allotments officer at the local council who advised me not to put a sign on the heap saying "Danger Wasps Nest." I was concerned other people might be stung, but I


Grow your own chutney

By Lila Das Gupta on 28/05/2010 12:46:03

is the perfect time to start.It's too late to sow onion seed now, but you may find that friends still have some sets left over (my allotment neighbour gave me some surplus red onion sets - 'Red Baron' I think). I also bought white onions ('Marco' F1) from


Reach for the sky

By Jane Moore on 09/11/2007 10:07:49

and let them run slightly amok. Ours do a lovely job of screening off the compost heap at the shady end of the plot where we'd struggle to grow anything else. And they pretty much look after themselves which makes them my kind of plant!


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