Week thirteen March 25th to April 1st
2006
Friday 31st March I have just spent another quiet few hours in the allotment. Last night it was Clio the cat that came to see me and tonight it was only the birds that sang to me. The ground, was very welcoming however, as we have had rain recently and the soil has warmed up considerably. I could spend hours in the allotment just now moving things around and weeding. I am becoming obsessed with my flowers rather than vegetables and have spent more time than I should moving plants around the aconites. I’m having to be careful as there are now aconite seedlings germinating amoungst the mature aconite plants. They have just germinated from last year’s seed. Next year I will enjoy moving half of the aconites to a new site and giving the area a really good clean up removing all perrenial weeds before putting the remainder back in their circle around the apple tree. I think I may move many of the flowers to the area under the large old cooking apple that is now free of bind weed. My stock of Campanular
Persicifoliar Chettle Charm has increased in the allotment in the last couple of years. I didn’t manage to get it to establish in the garden even after planting it in clumps of three separate plants in a variety of locations. I might try again this year in a couple of different locations in the garden.
Wednesday 29th March 2006 I made a trip out to my hive in Suffolk and unfortunately
that is another hive where the bees didn't survive the winter. There were strips
in place
and plenty of stored food in the brood box but still the bees had died.
Tuesday 28th March 2006 I have lost quite a few of my bees this year. So far I know for certain that five of the hives in the allotment have failed and don't living bees in anymore. Of the others I have inspected two so far that I can confirm have laying queens in. I have given all the hives that look as though they may possibly survive a dose of Thymol.
Saturday 25th March.
Everything changed this weekend. The wind has finally
moved around from the North and East and is coming from the South West.
It's
warm and wet instead of cold and dry. The clocks have changed and we are
now
in British summer time. The garden has changed and is now in bloom
with crocus, daffodils and tulips all out or coming out.
Many of the snowdrops are now sporting small green seedpods and although they have flowered well over the last few weeks they are now beginning to fade.
What husbands are for?
During the week I spotted a rat in the garden - so Saturday became compost
day and I turned out our compost bin and cleared the whole of the wildlife
friendly area behind it. There were signs of activity in the compost and
I didn't want a family of rats in the garden. Once I had dug down far enough
I found the rat's nest neatly made of shredded newspaper and bits and pieces.
I was glad to see that I had found it early enough and that it didn't have
any babies in it. I'm
hoping that that rat has now moved on as I have destroyed its nest and
removed the wildlife friendly area for the time being that it had made
its nest in.
Hedgehogs are one thing, rats are another.
Time for refection.
A quite Sunday afternoon in the allotment when no one else is around provides
plenty of opportunity to think and sort out one's head. I have been reflecting
a lot on the past recently and trying to get it in perspective. I am finding
it hard not to have big regrets. Regrets to do with my ignorance, vanity,
pride, and a stupid, selfish, male ego as a younger man. There are one
or two vital
days that I would love to go back to and change. If only I could. Life
could have been so different not only for me but for others close to me
way back then.
Unfortunately once the butterfly of the future has been stepped on and squashed
there is no going back and even though it is painful one has no choice but
to live with the consequences of ones actions.
But as the past can be reflected on so can the future be speculated on,
dreamed about and planned. Fantastic possibilities created. Wonderful happenings
constructed inside your head. The permutations and scenarios of future
encounters worked out in every delicate detail. The possibilities for fantasies
are limitless.
New seeds now need to be sown and new
gardens created to inhabit and enjoy.
Onions, garlic and shallots. I have hoed and weeded the garlic and the Japanese onions planted out last autumn. On Geoff's allotment I have created a new bed and filled it with onion sets.
Under the central apple tree this year's aconites are setting seed and last years seed is germinating as I found when removing some spear grass growing there. The crocus were out when the sun shone and looked good. I moved the red perennial poppies that I have as a result of splitting up my big established plant last year.
I managed to give away three Gooseberry plants. Planted
more seed potatoes.
Weeded strawberries. Planted out more Gooseberry bushes and another black
currant. Now I can get up to the allotment in the evenings my gardening
year has begun in ernest.
2005
Easter Sunday 27th March 2005 Sowed sprouts Kings FI Oliver and
Wellington F1. Moved, sorted out, pruned and weeded Gooseberry
bushes.
Saturday 26th March 2005 Even wetter than yesterday. Moved more
plants from the old apiary - daffodils, bluebells, and the last
Bleeding
Heart (Dicentra spectabilis) that did particularly well in that
sheltered damp
spot. There are still more plants to move including an apple tree.
March 25th 2005 Good Friday. Wet and gray - a great opportunity
to move plants around but no so good for bee-keeping. Only one
of the
two strawberry
plants that I bought last year has survived. I'm not sure why one
of died during the winter although it may have been smothered by
something
else in an overcrowded bed. The survivor was planted only a foot
or two away it has done really well a spread itself around rooting
in between
other plants.
Sowed leek seed, planted more potatoes and pruned more gooseberry
bushes.
2004
It is now very near the end of March and the last chance to plant out bare-rooted
trees and shrubs. We made a trip to the nursery on a little buying spree and
tried to squeeze yet more plants into an already overstocked garden.
I did buy a couple of new strawberry plants and a new black current bush (potted)
for the allotment.
The bees are beginning to get going after the winter and I am burning and scraping
the hive bases to give them a clean start to the year. The hive that was a big
conundrum last year and had a non laying queen in residence is now the strongest
hive that I have with a new good sized biscuit brown laying queen. This hive
is so much bigger and better than the others that I may only leave the control
strips in for a month rather than six weeks as I want to put some supers back
on. In this hive the bees are making honey now and I want them to start cleaning
up my frames from last year and I may try to get them to recycle some of the
remaining ivy honey that was made at the end of last year.
I have now uncovered the asparagus as the weather has got warmer.
I'm cropping cauliflowers and both white and purple sprouting broccoli in abundance
although the plants did not grow well last year due the the low rainfall I did
plant plenty of them.
2003
Wednesday March 23rd. The 'brothers' delivered a load of muck today from
their South Norfolk farm. Interesting chat about the price of livestock,
crop plans,
set aside, and wild birds. My load cost £25.
2002
March 31 Clocks changed - we are now in British Summertime. Planted out cabbages
'Golden Heart' given to me by Steve. Sowed seeds: cauliflower 'All the year round',
herb 'Rocket', lettuce mixed packet, cabbage 'Christmas Drumhead' and 'Red Drumhead'
in newly cleared ground (still burning weed). Sowed selected purple hollyhock
seed. Found left over seaweed liquid feed and fed Spring Cabbage again. Raked
over mulch on asparagus bed. Weather not as sunny but still warm wind moved around
to South West damp but yet to really rain. Continued digging.
March 30 still good gardening weather - still digging and planting potatoes.
Bought second bag of blood fish and bone to feed potatoes. Fed spring cabbage
with remains of last years liquid feed will now have buy some seaweed liquid
feed until the comfrey grows enough to produce more home made. Still sowing runner
beans.
March 29 Good Friday bank holiday. Perfect weather warm and sunny all day. The
bees are making honey. Replaced another hive base with a clean sterilized one.
Finished planting new potatoes 'Condor' now planting mid season 'Kestrel'. Still
digging
March 26 sowed more broad beans. Still digging.
The new 'apiary' or Geoff's new allotment at the end has been getting a lot of
attention in the last few weeks.
2000
25/26 March. Radish, peas, carrots and the first of the new potatoes sown Sunday
26
March 27th
1999
Spring returns. Sowed peas, radish, and more sprouts. Hoed onions, beans. Weeded
strawberries (not before time). Prepared ground for more potatoes. Did final
pruning. Weeded and tidied garden.