Perhaps that's why the usually longest month of the year disappeared in the blink of an eye and now we're into February. It's started mild and not too wet so we've had two weekends of some allotment work. Jamie cleared the strawberry bed which has been entirely swamped by bindweed over the last couple of years. We're going to grow the strawberries in growbags this year in the hope that we can recover the area underneath. And I planted up the Egyptian onions (aka tree onions, walking onions) - look how tiny they are!
I should have planted them on arrival but the weather was too cold and unfortunately some of the bulblets were past their best - I hope I at least get a few to grow. I found out about them in a book I received at Christmas from my nephew - it's a little set of old Gardeners Companion books by Dr Shewell-Cooper (I can't help reading it in a Mr Cholmondley-Warner voice, from Harry Enfield 😃). I've also found this useful advice online from the LovelyGreens blog.The last weekend in January meant it was the RSPB Big Garden Birdwatch weekend. Unfortunately the Sunday wasn't a sunny day and the birds weren't very active, but we saw a few. All of these are regulars at the moment and there are actually 3 robins who are getting very aggressive with each other.At the weekend the weather was quite reasonable, especially in the Sun, and like many other plotholders we decided the time had come to do a bit of ground preparation. Most of the beds look like this... weeds and lots of grass growth. The wet weather has made it easy to pull most of those weeds though and after a couple of hours both days we now have a cleared potato plot with sulphur sprinkled and dug in.Aaah, freshly cleared earth is such a happy sight! We seem to have created a cliff at one end of the plot - I'm sure that'll settle a bit 😆
You seem to be doing the same tasks as us on the allotments. I ought to try a nut loaf to have with our salads, would it freeze?
ReplyDeleteYes, we’re all in synch at the moment! I haven’t tried freezing it but the internet assures that you can, for 3months
DeleteHuzzah for getting back into the soil again!! That sunset photo is so pretty I can only imagine how wonderful it was in person! I looked up the birds you saw as they're largely new to me. Very cool! That Blue Tit in particular! What a stunning little cutie. The cousin, apparently, to the chickadees that visit our plots here in Montana. What a world!
ReplyDeleteThe blue tit is cute - my little chickadee 😊 Oh yes, it’s the same shape, but the blue tit is bluer 😊
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