This month I'm attempting to eat just from the garden and whatever supplies I have in my larder, perhaps a way to prepare for the coming changes in the UK?
The first thing that's happened is I've noticed my eye being drawn to things I don't usually see as food like dandelion leaves as well as radish seed pods to augment the haul.
Sunday, 6 October 2019
Friday, 13 September 2019
Real Majik wands
cut just below a growth bud, dipped in rooting hormone solution (willow wands immersed for a few days in water) then pushed into the ground.
And here is the bed, the following March, buds bursting into life although not fully leafed yet, for anyone concerned that it can't be that easy.
Thursday, 6 June 2019
How to garden with slugs without losing your soul. PART ONE
Perhaps the best pest in the garden today is our apparently
infinite selection of slugs. Born as tiny clear pinheads they grow rapidly, gorging
on our favourite green vegetation, until some are as big as sausages.
Slugs eat everything they can, including taking the odd
chunk out of one another. Given the choice however, they like the most delicate
of plant parts. With enough rainfall and they have the ability to eat a whole newly
sewn garden crop in less than one night.
Soft-bodied gardeners, normally remain pleasant and patient
have turned frothy lipped to murder, eviction, poison and maim without apology.
Our gardens have become a battleground with one particular party taking the whole
thing very personally. But consider the cost,
when we find ourselves so angry and defeated in our very own green zone? What
herbivores don’t consider, as they sprinkle the salt, is the damage they are
doing to their own soul.
Slugs are not out to get us, they are just grabbing a quick
bite at teatime and, so what you don’t like the look or feel of them? Slugs
probably think we take more than our fair shares sometimes too.
However hope of reconciliation is here; salvation and soul
damage retrieval could be close at hand. There is something you can do.
Creating a slug sanctuary, in the form of a well-sealed, in
full sun compost container where these slow movers can be safely rehoused, this
simple step turns every sighting from a gnashing of teeth to a moment of
excitement. Assiduous after-dark collections and relocating slugs into a
compost bin of weeds where they can eat away happily whilst creating pure soil
in the process is as easy as a walk in the park.
Slugs have as much right to be on planet as we do, without
their work we would be knee high in rotting vegetation by now. Simply going
about their daily business of eating and excreting, slugs could be seen as soil
enhancers of the first order. A beneficial being whose ability to break down
plant matter into soil means that they can speed up the process of composting
beyond many a wildest dream.
Like any creature, they need boundaries to stop them over
reproducing and running amok but given a half decent composter they can munch
their whole body weight in less than twenty minutes and keep on munching for a
very long, long time. Think how much compost they produce as they chow down
hard in your service. Unfortunately for them their eggs will not survive the
heat and it is also even rumoured that slug ‘Nematode’ will flourish in such
environs.
From their point of view, a compost bin is a damp, safe
from predator bird haven, filled with their favourite munch material. So as you
walk your little charge on a trowel towards it’s new home, you can hold on to
your heart knowing that you are taking them to a place they would call “heaven”.
Thursday, 30 May 2019
Monday, 27 May 2019
Friday, 15 February 2019
Feb 2019
The first sunny day in this spring found me free from paid work, so....I was able to spend the whole of it weeding the fruit cage #finally. Now all I have to do is stitch the holes in the nets before the berries come.
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