blog tour

When my friend Gill How asked me if I would take the baton in a ‘blogging tour’, my immediate impulse was eek, no! Then I reflected on my habit of shying away from anything remotely public, and decided instead to be bold. So here is my contribution, answering the 4 questions and then introducing 3 more writers to continue the process.

Question 1 – What am I working on?

Every year at this time it seems impossible that productive abundance will resurrect from the cold, wet and daunting aftermath of winter. How will I ever manage all the digging, composting, planning, planting, germinating, potting on, hardening off, structuring, juxtapositioning etc etc? So right now I’m somewhere in that whirl, working on the 2014 version, trusting that fruitful order will emerge and remembering that the miracle of the real work is done by Mother Nature, with my job just to be the caretaker.

Question 2 – How does my work differ from others of this genre?

Allotment plots are all unique, even those that follow traditional lines and contain the same plants. So my dear little huerto, and by extension this blog about it, I suppose differs from others in being an expression of my particular engagement with the annual cycle of creation; what I choose and how I then respond to what happens. Not everyone diligently picks out the teeny little stones and whispers encouragement to the weakest seedling.

Question 3 – Why do I write what I do?

Not unlike Candide, after his painful disillusionment that all, in fact, is probably not for the best in this best of all possible worlds, I find practical consolation in his injunction, il faut cultiver le jardin. I also love my dear friend Shahzadi’s thought that cultivating just a tiny piece of ground with tender care can be thought of as a homeopathic remedy for our beautiful yet sick planet. Writing about it is a practical journal and, perhaps, also allegory.

Question 4 – How does my writing process work?

Hmm, I hadn’t realised I had a process. However, on reflection I notice that it goes like this: every so often something stands out for me that I want to capture; horticultural, practical, observational or just delightful. Then to record it I generally take photos with my phone (rather hazardous, that, especially when wet and muddy) and when I get home, still in my dirty old gardening clothes, sit down and put it straight on to the blog. I also twiddle with the layout so as to avoid what they used to call ‘orphans and widows’. Amazing how you can prune writing to fit the space…

And now to introduce my friends who will offer the next stops on the tour:

Arpy Shively                    Arpy has been writing professionally since 1993, everything from ad copy,Arpi blogshot brochures and press releases to websites and online articles. After working in the UK and US, she came to Spain and started writing travel and lifestyle articles, including the Andalucia section of the 2008 Lonely Planet Spain Guide. Since 2006 she has been posting fitfully on her blog Andalucid, first about small town life in the Alpujarras, near Granada, and since 2012 about big, beautiful Málaga.

Ashen Venema               is a poet, photographer and writer. She says: Poetry and photography have long been means of creative witnessing. It’s Ashenonly in recent years that I committed time to serious writing. My blog allows me to share my window on the world. Course of Mirrors, my first novel, is an engaging quest journey of a woman in search for the real, due to be published in the autumn.

Meg Robinson                  is an Irish artist- writer with Scottish connections who loves to travel to megremote corners of the world. She runs creative, spiritual, and shamanic retreats from her home in southern Spain. In March 2008 Meg visited Peru and fell in love with the country and its people, becoming a fund raiser for a charity near Machu Picchu and later visiting Bolivia to meet Ivan Nogales, creator of an arts/theatre centre for street children for whom she is also an indefatigable fund raiser.

 

 

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grando violetto broad bean mystery

IMG_1817So three boxes of broad bean seeds were planted on the same day, and in the same way; heritage crimson flowered, witkiem manita and grando violetto (purple beans with a green pod). Then all placed in the cold frame to do their thing… Mysteriously, although the other two germinated and grew beautifully, the GVs did not! Just one runty little seedling has appeared. So far I’ve resisted poking about for signs of life…

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I’ve now planted out the broad beans that had germinated, along with the seedling peas ‘Champion of England’ bred in 1843 by William Fairbeard, a Kentish nurseryman – who was later consulted by Darwin when he was writing his book on natural selection. (I just love that sort of detail!) I learned about it on a very informative blog by Daughter of the Soil, to whom I am very grateful. I’ve had fun twisting locally coppiced hazel peasticks to create climbing support and, I hope, also protection from marauding pigeons.

And the apple tree is looking very pretty in full blossom against the newly painted shed.

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forget-me-not blue shed

IMG_1805A new plot-holder adjacent to me not only erected an identical shed to mine, but then painted it the very same shade of deep blue (newly painted last year here). So as mine was looking dingy after the dark wet winter months, with green algae creeping in, I decided to repaint it today in another colour. So here it is freshly liveried in forget-me-not blue. It was rather tricky getting behind the espalier apple tree…

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digging, digging, digging…

IMG_1790It’s been hard work but now there’s only one final bed left to dig over – and that’s been covered all winter with black plastic, so should be fairly easy. There are lots of worms in the ground, even though it’s all densely compacted after the long weeks of rain.

The forced rhubarb is coming along well (starting to push the lid off!) and the new strawberry plants seem to like their elevated home … it took all my strength to get the grow-bags up there, but worth the effort as they’ll get the sun and take no extra space.

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lavender, leeks and white sprouting broccoli

The lavender at the end of the rose bed had become very woody and overgrown. Time to dig it out. Which was surprisingly easy. And it gives the adjacent roses more light and space. So now I have the luxury of this fertile space and the question of what to plant there… more lavender? nepeta (will all the cats of the neighbourhood come and snooze in it?) or annuals perhaps – ammi majus, cosmos, zinnias? hmmmm

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Lavender before                                               …. and after

Then picked white sprouting broccoli and leeks for supper.

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L’Oignon Rosé de Roscoff

For ages I’ve wanted to try growing the marvellous pink French onion ‘rosé de Roscoff’, aka Keravel; the sort Onion Johnnies used to bring to the UK on bikes and old Citroëns. I managed to find seed on a French website a couple of years ago but they didn’t do well. So this year I became obsessive and finally triumphed in finding onion sets by googling en français and a neat little packet duly arrived from La Bonne Graine in Anjou. They’re now planted in a sunny bed and I do hope they like it there.

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now with snowdrops

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A month of rain later, clumps of snowdrops lifted from my parents’ garden now grace the bare earth around the base of the fruit trees. ‘They’ say that you shouldn’t have anything competing with newly planted trees, but surely such dainty little bulbs can do no harm.

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raspberry renewal

IMG_1694The raspberry cage had become horribly overgrown and last year’s summer fruiting crop was not great. Also, the farm manure, while very welcome, had imported a lot of persistent weeds that had tucked into the root system. Radical action was indicated. It was not as hard a job as anticipated to dig out the old canes (I left several along the back row next to the wire) though contortion was needed around the gooseberry spikes!

IMG_1697I also pruned the currant bushes to more manageable proportions and got out most of  the invasive mint roots that had crept in under the perimeter boarding. Silly of me to have planted it adjacent in the first place; but such a lovely scent when brushed against…  So here are the newly planted bare root Tulameen summer fruiting canes, dusted with mycorrhizal fungi as they went in. I left some strawberry plants too.

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tree planting

Back in action! Bean poles down and onions, garlic and shallots showing signs of growth.

IMG_1691This week I bought a bare root morello cherry and a damson tree to complete the mixed row of fruit trees bordering the path from the gate down to the allotment plots.

I thought I’d plant some snowdrops at the base too…

It was pouring with rain by the time I’d finished, with a friendly robin who sat watching in the cherry tree as I finished off, waiting for a wormy lunch.

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felled by fennel

IMG_1220Here is the culprit in happier days (July I think). Some months later, two Fridays ago to be precise, I was clearing this bed and making good progress on the sweetcorn. I then had a go at the fennel and, after much hard digging and pulling, had uprooted two and started on a third. Rather tired by now, I dug as far as I could and then started pulling. And pulling. Then finally heaving with all my strength…. when of course the tap root broke and I went flying backwards to land very hard on my back on the edge of the raised bed. Ouch! Still recovering and unable to do any physical work. Most frustrating as I was already behind with clearing… Note to self: in future dig don’t pull!

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tucked in for winter & onion sets planted

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underground treasures

IMG_1547 IMG_1561Just in time, which means just before the rain arrived in earnest, I got the onions safely into the shed, the red ones strung rather inexpertly along the shelf. Note also the very useful Spanish hand tool bought in the friendly hardware shop in Orgiva, hanging alongside my home-made leek dibber, all that remains of one of the several garden forks I managed to break with my extravagant digging technique earlier in the year! And is there anything to compare with the pleasure of unearthing unexpectedly perfect root vegetables? Here are the first jerusalem artichokes (Fuseau) along with Vivaldi potatoes grown in black plastic exhibition bags – all had spent the summer in a shady spot beside the compost bins, overshadowed by trees and neglected apart from occasional watering and a whispered word of encouragement en passant. How well they have rewarded me. If you’re interested to see how they were turned into a rather nice gratin, have a look at the Recipes page.

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summer’s lease hath all too short a date

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The last allotment flowers of summer 2013… the scent of roses is gorgeous!

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new toad & mellow fruitfulness

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late roses & leek planting

ImageToday brought a lovely late flush of the rose ‘James Galway”, perfect for the delicate two-tiered glass vase I bought from Stamford antique market. The rest of the rose bushes are somewhat lost amid the purple haze of verbena which have now completely taken over the rose bed! But the combination works well for successional flowering and I’ve put a lovely load of well rotted manure on the base of all the roses to ensure a good display next summer. Just hope it doesn’t introduce too many weeds…

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I also dug out the last of the Charlotte potatoes (uncovering a very angry ant colony in so doing!). This made space to plant the 2 bunches of leeks that I bought at the Friday market. I cut off the tops as instructed at one of the allotment lectures and used my leek dibber, made from the tapered wooden handle of a garden fork I broke with over-vigorous digging earlier in the year! Then just topped up with water and will leave to fill in over time. The leeks I planted earlier in the summer are coming along well so we should have a good ongoing supply for winter soups.

The harvest today included the very first sweetcorn and tomatoes.

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various alliums

Just as the newly shorn golden fields on the IMG_1408outskirts of my village are redolent of this time of year, so in its own small way is the onion patch showing off its harvest. The red & white onions, shallots ‘Jermor’ and various garlics have all done well and are now drying on the vintage apple rack bought at a gardening fair at Farnham Maltings some years ago. It’s good to have them safely harvested and showing no signs of rot.

unknown allium flowerAnd, delightfully, one of the little plants that Rosie Rose so kindly gave me from her marvellous huerto has put forth a flower! It was the masses of beautiful little pink agapanthus-like flowers on her plants that drew me to them, so I am delighted to have this now in my little plot. Hopefully there will be more to follow as both clumps have established nicely. Just wish I knew what they are! A visit to Wisley this afternoon brought my attention to a very similar flowering plant in the herb garden called ‘Chinese chives’ but on closer inspection the flowers were less delicate. Any ideas?

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hyacinth beans & ripening tomatoes

IMG_1402I nearly missed it, this first flowering of the lablab purpurea  ‘Ruby Moon’ that I had planted as a weedy little seedling at the edge of the sweet pea trench planted to grow up the new archway. But here it is, a lovely spray of magenta ‘hyacinth bean’ flowers, with a very promising growth twining above it around the arch structure – I hope that the weather will continue to be warm for long enough for it to climb to the top.

The sweet peas are still flowering, though not so strongly, and the deadheading is a daily job now. So it would be lovely if the new growth of hyacinth beans can add colour and vigour to the arch.

IMG_1404Meanwhile, the tomatoes are really starting to ripen and showing colour. Also the chillis are turning a gorgeous lipstick red and look almost artificial in their glossy pointed glory.

The basil planted around the tomato plants is bushing out nicely and the Thai basil is showing signs of tiny purple flowerheads at the growing tips, very pretty and aromatic.

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bees abuzzing

This gallery contains 5 photos.

It’s lovely to see and hear so many busy bees over recent days. And different varieties too. There seem to be an increasing number of big fuzzy bumble bees alongside the other smaller ones, all buzzily going about their buzziness… … Continue reading

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allotment show success

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a productive day

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IMG_1316I particularly like the Spanish marmalade jar, bought in anticipation of this very purpose.

I also made this wee hat today (with lots of hand washing to avoid jammy stickiness!) – it was rather fiddly to do on circular needles but perfect without any seams for precious newborn little head (grandbaby due in November!!!)

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