A
SUNNY SPRING DAY
Spring
eventually arrived once we got into April, so it was warm enough to
bring out the picnic table from store so we could enjoy tea on the
patio. Isolation at home is fine for those of us with
gardens as there is always
some wee job to sort out.
As many folks will be confined to barracks
for many weeks, I reckon by mid summer there will be some brilliant
looking gardens around, but maybe not many folks to see them. Now
that temperatures are rising garden plants are just loving it and
spring flowers are popping up everywhere. The self
isolation can
affect your mental well-being if
boredom sets in, but the lucky ones with a garden are kept busy
working amongst fresh fruit, vegetables
and flowers to keep us entertained. Then we have beautiful flowers to
enjoy both in the garden and some cut flowers for the home. However
the story is a bit different up on the allotment plots. For many plot
holders who live in flats the allotment plot is their garden for
exercise in the fresh air, a place for relaxation amongst nature and
the production of fresh healthy vegetables and fruit, and most also
grow flowers to make their plot attractive. These outdoor activities
in the sun also builds up strong levels of vitamin D and home grown
fruit and vegetables provide a wide range of vitamins, minerals and
antioxidants to keep us strong and more able to fight off any attack
of the coronavirus. The allotment movement all over UK provide a
massive amount of fresh produce as
many amateur gardeners are nearly
self sufficient for half the year. I still have a few onions,
Anna plants the broad beans |
Mixed crocus |
Magnolia stellata |
potatoes and pumpkins in store
and outdoors there is swedes, sprouts, leeks, kale and my over
wintered lettuce can now be picked. Anna’s freezer is still bulging
with fruit and vegetables
harvested
last year. Advice coming from government has considered the above and
Michael Gove concluded that using allotments for exercise was
perfectly sensible provided plot holders maintain the recommended
distance from each other and also implement other precautions of
washing hands and not forming any social groups. If any plot holder
shows any signs of
infection they must leave the site until they
recover. Up on City Road Allotments, we now all wear gloves when
opening gates on arrival and as our communal hut and toilets are shut
down we bring along a flask of tea and our social chat is confined to
shouting, Good Morning over the plot fence. Allotments are relatively
quiet and even with over sixty plots there is usually only about
three to six people on site at any one occasion. No-one can escape
the new rules as notices are everywhere from the entrance gates, the
new flower border, a blaze of daffodils and tulips at this moment,
and on the communal hut outdoor noticeboard. The communal hut and
toilets are shut down for the time being.
The last stored vegetables |
Time to bring out the picnic tables |
The
normal April showers have not yet arrived so the ground is perfect
for seed sowing and
planting,
provided everything gets watered afterwards. The hardy range of broad
beans, sweet peas and chrysanthemums have all got planted then
watered in. Turnip Purple Top Milan, Leek
Musselburgh
and Pea Kelvedon Wonder have all been sown outdoors on the plot and
African marigold, Livingston daisies and Nemesia got sown in seed
trays indoors. These will be pricked out into cellular trays after a
couple of weeks.
Amaryllis that had flowered in December is now growing strongly in
the greenhouse, and will get fed regularly to build up the bulb for
flowering next December. Spring flowers of pansies,
polyanthus
and wallflower with tulips
City Road Allotments flower border |
Wee
jobs to do this week
Remove flower shoots from rhubarb |
Rhubarb is now growing
strongly and pulling a few stems for the kitchen is very welcome.
To
keep it growing add some fertiliser and a mulch of well rotted
compost. Rhubarb can be a gross feeder and also needs plenty of
moisture so water the clumps in dry spells. Flowering shoots appear
early in April. Remove these as soon as possible otherwise they will
affect growth.END