Archive for March, 2010

Grow your Own; What to do in April

Monday, March 29th, 2010

What to do in your plot in April
Welcome to the second installment of my ‘what to do each month’ suggestions for your allotment plot or garden.
April is great, the soil is warming up and spring should be here. Do keep an eye on the weather forecast though, even in the south of England a cold snap and snow are not unknown in April, (and one is being forecast this week!) Keeping horticultural fleece on standby in case of cold weather is a good idea.


Harvest
We’re in the ‘Hungry Gap’ between the last of the winter crops and start of the early crops but there are still a few things available, late sprouting and chards for example plus you may have some early salad crops from the greenhouse border.
Do re-check your stored crops. On a fine day, empty out the potato sacks and check for any rotten potatoes. If you’ve strung onions, watch out for the odd rotten one and remove it before it spreads.

General Gardening Tip
If you have any horticultural fleece, you can peg that onto the ground a week or so before you plant. The small rise in temperature of the soil can make a big difference.

Sowing, Planting and Cultivating
There’s quite a list to sow and plant outside, especially if March has not been suitable, and we all know that not only has March been unsuitable, so has January and February!
Do remember the weeds are springing into action, so keep the hoe going. Don’t forget, a sharp hoe is the best friend a gardener can have. Just slide it back and forth slightly below the surface of the soil and you’ll stop the weed seedlings in their tracks. Hoeing is also good in the event of drought as the disturbed soil surface stops the water being sucked to the surface by capillary action and evaporating in dry winds.

Sow the following:-
• Beetroot
• Peas
• Broad Beans
• Broccoli
• Brussels Sprouts
• Cabbage
• Cauliflower
• Kale
• Chard
• Kohl Rabi
• Leeks
• Spinach
• Beet spinach
• Rocket
• Lettuce
• Radish

With your carrots, covering with a fleece and ensuring the edges are buried will stop the carrot root fly from gaining entry to lay eggs by your carrots. The eggs hatch in larvae that burrow into the carrot root, killing the plant or at least ruining the crop.

Plant Outdoors
Globe and Jerusalem Artichokes
Onion & Shallot Sets – if you have not done so already.
Asparagus.
Easter is the traditional potato planting time. If you have a comfrey bed and it has sprung back, the first cut laid in the trench under the potatoes will provide nutrition to get them off to a good start.
On the subject of comfrey, if you make a comfrey tea it will help you to a great crop to use it on your potatoes. Many novice growers wonder why they have small crops of potatoes and most often this is just down to lack of food for this hungry crop.

Sow Outdoors Under Cloche
• French beans
• Lettuce
• Sweetcorn

Alternative Method for Sweetcorn
Some of my friends pre-chit their sweetcorn., They lay the seeds on a layer of damp kitchen paper and then place a layer of paper over in an airtight box. An old ice-cream carton or a Tupperware type box is ideal. Check carefully each day and as soon as the small white sprout appears, plant the seed about half to an inch deep in a 3″ pot of general purpose compost in the greenhouse.
When the shoots appear about an inch high, plant out under cloches being careful not to disturb the root (sweetcorn hates root disturbance) under a cloche. Sweetcorn needs a lot of nitrogen and a teaspoon of dried blood per plant or water with urea (this is a chemical, I do not mean pee on them!!)

Many of the crops you can sow directly will also benefit from cloching, especially as you move northwards or started off in modules in a cool greenhouse or coldframe and then planted out later.

Sow in Heat (Greenhouse or Windowsill)
• Aubergine
• Celery
• Outdoor Cucumbers
• Tomatoes (if you’ve not already done so)
A good tip in a windowsill is to stick some silver cooking foil onto cardboard and place on the inside to reflect light back onto the seedlings.

Fruit
Strawberries can be planted out now, it’s best to remove flowers in the first year as you conserve strength for growth and gain larger crops in subsequent years. An easy way to gain strawberry plants is to plant the runners into pots and when rooted cut the runner. The plants don’t last forever so you need to rotate them ever three to five years.
Hand pollinate peaches and nectarines. Tickle the flowers with a small paint brush to spread the pollen. Cover if a cold spell threatens.
A good layer of compost around the base of fruit trees will ensure they have the nutrition to provide another good crop for you.

Gardener’s Pests
I’ve mentioned the carrot root fly but the gardener’s worst enemy is awakening. The evil slugs and snails are coming out to eat entire rows of succulent young seedlings overnight so take action now.!
Happy gardening!

Grow your own blog

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

Hello, my name is Craig. I live in Nottingham, and welcome to the first of my regular blogs about growing your own food.

What I hope to show is how much fun growing your own, how much more tasty your own veg is and cheaper than the stuff you buy in your local supermarket.

I had two allotments, which also housed chicken and a polytunnel with my previous wife. She unfortunately got all those in the divorce settlement.

Thankfully another plot became free at the start of the year at my local plot, so my wife and I have now started from scratch on a new plot.

You can follow our successes and failures at our blog – www.wegrowourown.co.uk. In this blog I will be giving you hints and tips on what to grow, where and when. You will also see how easy it is, and that if an unfit 39 year old like me can do it, so can you!

I also love cooking, and my favourite celebrity cook is Nigel Slater, so expect me to chip in with quick, easy and tasty ways to make meals out of your own produce.

I also want this to be a two way street. I’ve been growing fruit and veg for a while, but I am always learning. So if you have any comments to make, or tips to share, please share it with me and everyone else. The more people share information and tips, the more delicious fruit and veg we can all grow, and the less we have to rely on the supermarkets.

Just think about how it will benefit your body, soul, and as important, your wallet!

BigBarn has joined Wikaniko ‘We Can Eco’

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

BigBarn has joined Wikaniko as a ‘distributor’ as I want to buy good eco products cheaper than I can in the supermarket. I also want to use their great website to promote BigBarn and borrow some of their eco content like Grow your Own.

After watching ‘End of the Line’ last night I am even more angry with the global food industry and see the only way forward is to shop locally as much as possible and cut out the supermarket. If I go I am always tempted to buy something I didn’t need and perhaps, promote a terrible chain of events. For instance, from ‘End of the Line’, when I buy or eat tuna, I promote factory fishing and may force a traditional African fisherman out of business, who may then try to emigrate to Europe in an attempt to support his family.

So Wikaniko helps me avoid the supermarket and order hundreds of ‘Green’ household and gardening products, and save money. If you are not impressed that I am joining, what some people wrongly describe, as a ‘pyramid scheme’, please comment. I was happy to pay the £48 to get the ‘wholesale’ price on all the products and if BigBarn does make any money it will be reinvested in to BigBarn and our Local Food Mission.

For more on Wikoniko and have a look at all the products, see our pages at http://www.bigbarneco.co.uk You can buy and test some products, join and get the wholesale price, or treat it as a business and make money as a distributor.

BEST MOTHERS DAY GIFT

Friday, March 5th, 2010

I know, you look after your mother all year so why do ‘they’ try and make money out of us by organising a special ‘Day’ for mothers.

Well if you love your mum and would like to give something different try some of these unusual products from the BigBarn MarketPlace. To get to the producers shop simply click on the underlined products or search results.

Natural lip balms and bees wax products
Natural soaps and botanical products
All kinds of chocolates
Natural and unusual teas
Home made real fudge
Cookery Courses Great tasting Coffee
Unusual, biscuits, flapjacks, cakes

Or go to MarketPlace and search for any other products your mum loves.