London (change)
Today 19°C / 12°C
Tomorrow 18°C / 12°C
Keywords:
Sort by:

1 to 10 of 26 results

Categories

Allotments (26)

Authors

Jane Moore (18)
Lila Das Gupta (7)
Pippa Greenwood (1)

Date Range

More than 12 months (26)

Related Searches

Purple sprouting broccoli

By Jane Moore on 20/03/2008 17:01:00

I love the first harvest of the new season - it's so welcome after the long dark winter. For a while now, I've been harvesting winter veg, such as leeks, kale and cabbage. These stalwarts of the plot have meant we've had fresh veg for soups


New year's resolutions

By Jane Moore on 31/12/2008 09:47:21

The long chilly winter evenings are ideal for looking back on the year and reflecting on its triumphs and disasters. Some triumphs are of my own making - my carrots were fantastic thanks to my sowing the seeds at the right time, unlike last year


Purple-sprouting passion

By Jane Moore on 09/08/2007 10:56:00

!Now I'm busily into planting up all the winter and spring crops - all my brassicas including kale, cabbages and purple-sprouting broccoli. My young purple-sprouting looks glorious - really well grown and leafy, though I do say so myself. But I always


Frost

By Jane Moore on 31/10/2008 12:52:37

I was starting to wonder if we would get a frost this October. The weather’s been so meek and mild of late, with winter looking a far way off. Global warming, I thought, has led to unseasonally balmy weather on the hillsides of Bath.But now we


Frost

By Jane Moore on 12/12/2008 15:49:35

next year my plot will be free of aphids, brassica whitefly and countless other pests that survive mild winters, and multiply with a vengeance in early spring. Mild winters are a boon to many garden pests; pests such as whitefly can shelter in the folds


Saving seed

By Jane Moore on 17/07/2009 13:00:43

I've been letting a few crops run to seed this year. I left a few parsnips and a couple of rows of leeks over winter to be harvested as and when I needed them, but there were far too many of them and many stayed in the ground.In spring, the leeks


Autumn on the allotment

By Lila Das Gupta on 18/09/2009 17:08:53

Where does the old season end and the new one begin? For allotmenteers it can feel like something of a continuum - these days you can buy excellent plug plants of winter lettuce and oriental greens that will take you right through winter, if you


Staking trees

By Jane Moore on 14/11/2008 16:02:49

I've never known rain like it (well, this being the UK, maybe I have). The poor old allotment is saturated, windswept and generally the worse for wear.I'm tidying up and securing all the brassica netting that's blown all over the plot these last few


Composting waste

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

. But I can still take all the lovely garden rubbish up to the allotment. All the blackened dahlia stems, fallen leaves, old bedding plants and herbaceous stems will rot down beautifully over the winter.


Wet soil

By Jane Moore on 28/11/2008 11:45:33

to dig the soil when conditions are right, to avoid getting it stuck all over your boots, hands and spade.What I need is a few sharp frosts to dry it all out and break up the lumps. I really hope we get a proper cold winter down here this year – it


1 to 10 of 26 results
Search time: 0.012 secs