Showing posts with label tools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tools. Show all posts
Tuesday, 4 March 2014
Packing up for the allotment
As we were packing up the car ready to go to the allotment I thought it must be like setting off on an expedition with the amount of stuff we sometimes take with us. There are the essentials, flasks, milk, cake, fruit, maybe lunch too. Then there's the all important wellies with an extra pair of socks. My husband's tool bag goes in and any garden tools we may need. We have a collection of tools in the allotment sheds, but some tools like my favourite border spade and fork are too good to be left at the allotment where they could be stolen. So they go in the car every time we go.
Those are all the essentials for every allotment visit, but then there are all the extras. Sometimes there are bags of garden or kitchen waste for the compost heap. This week there have been trays of plants for the woodland garden, trays of strawberry plants for the polytunnel and bags of compost. It's not surprising my husband said we couldn't fit any thing else in.
What do you take to the allotment with you?
Friday, 6 July 2012
Slow progress at the new allotment
My husband, who is the engineer of the team, has built the compost bins using wood which has been left on the allotment car park for everyone to use.
My daughter, son-in-law and I have cleared weeds from several beds as well as around the outside of the plot, as we were told by the allotments officer they were our responsibility too. We have also cleared out and cleaned two of the sheds which we are going to keep, the other two sheds will eventually be demolished.
One of the difficulties we have encountered as well as the weeds is the heavy wet sticky soil, the stones, and the drainage problem which became apparent last week after the torrential rains. My husband is now building two raised beds at the front of the plot and putting in drains using many of the stones we have found.
There is also an awful lot of rubbish lying around the plot, wood, paving slabs, bricks etc. Some of it is useful stuff which we will keep and can use in many ways around the plot. My husband found scaffolding boards in the big cabin, he is using them to make the raised beds and the stones are being used to make the drains. We have found tools--a big lump hammer and two huge scythes ( useful for chopping all those weeds down with). I'm trying to make a storage area next to one of the sheds for all this reusable stuff. It's quite a treasure trove of recyclable materials.
Despite all these problems we love going to work on the allotment and every time we go we make a little bit more progress. Our main priorities for growing at the moment are to create a permanent growing space for the fruit which we will bring from our old allotment in the autumn and another space for the winter veg--purple sprouting broccoli, kale, swede, spring cabbage and leeks etc.
These are the next areas to be cleared. It's a bit daunting.
Friday, 29 June 2012
Shed love
I have to admit to being a bit of a shed lover. There's nothing I like better than to visit a garden and peer into the shed to see how it's all set out. I love to see how other people use their sheds. Sheds have all sorts of uses these days, for offices, studies, hobbies rooms, places to write, rest, retreat to etc.
One of our local bishops when he was first appointed and moved into his Bishop's house had a shed put in the garden to use as a chapel. He needed a quiet space away from the distractions of the telephone which he could use for his regular morning and evening prayer. I had the privilege of seeing his shed once. Fitted out with a small altar and a few chairs, icons and christian symbols, the shed had a quiet, prayerful atmosphere, it was a very special place.
At our allotments there are some 'interesting' sheds made out of old doors, windows, fence panels, corrugated sheets. They are really ramshackle looking places, but great examples of recycling. They are places to store garden stuff, sit and drink tea, shelter from the rain, but they are also well loved places.
At the RHS garden Harlow Carr there is a shed which I drool over whenever we go there. It's a lovely old fashioned Victorian gardener's shed. I'd love a shed like it, but, it's probably a bit too showy, too neat and tidy for me. My shed could never be so tidy.
This is a quirky sort of shed we spotted on a walk whilst visiting our daughter in Bedfordshire.
It's often said that men love their sheds and it seems to have started at an early age in our family because our 6 year old grandson, ever since he could walk, has had a thing about our shed. Whenever we were out in the garden he would (and still does) make a beeline for the shed and would emerge brandishing mine or grandad's tools, much to our horror! Now he has his own tools in there and is a bit safer.
I would love to have a big enough shed to be able to sit in and use for other things, like reading gardening magazines and drinking tea. I think I really need a summer house!
Because it's not so big, outside of my shed is also a very special area. That's where my potting bench is. It's home made by my husband out of an old kitchen table and it's perfect. It's where I sow seeds, transplant seedlings, pot things on. But it's also a place where I can escape to. I can sit there in the sunshine with a mug of tea, listening to the birds singing, looking at the garden.
Are you a shed lover? What's your shed like?
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