LOCKDOWN
IN THE GARDEN
It has taken a major disaster
to let people see the benefits of a garden. Prior to the coronavirus
epidemic, gardens were going
out of favour as they involved a wee bit of hard graft, (digging,
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Auralia paints her new fence |
planting
and weeding) and as more and more folk have cars they need somewhere
to park them so gardens lost out to hard landscaping of slabs, setts,
paving, gravel and tarmac. Today there are also so many leisure
activities that gardening was relegated to the lower levels of the
popularity table.
Then along comes the virulent
virus and social life and many jobs came to a standstill. Now we are
all in lockdown, what on earth can we get up to relieve boredom.
Those of us with gardens will be fine and even a lot better if we
also have an allotment. For folk living in flats and those with
concrete gardens the answer
seems to be getting an allotment. Interest in gardening has
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Steve and Erica dig up the lawn |
mushroomed but there is a
problem of access to plants, seeds, compost, pots, etc. as garden
centres are all closed. Fortunately everybody is now becoming
competent in ordering online so we get our gardening supplies
delivered to our home, though hopefully when this goes to print the
garden centres will all be open and doing a great trade.
Most
gardens are not all that big so there is a limit on just how many
garden jobs we can find. I have been amazed. Our City Road Allotments
have both a website and a Facebook page.
While on Facebook you get
invited to join other garden groups like Allotments Online. There are
masses of new entrants into the world of gardening who just have not
got a clue, but are very keen to learn. Some folk that just got a
plot very overgrown and in a short space of time it was cleaned up
and planted with photos provided. Very impressive.
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Anne and Frank's Hot Tub |
Gardens
are going through a period of transformation as folk have all the
time in the world, while in lockdown, to think about plans to
modernise their gardens. Garden fences are being repaired and
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Dino Daly creates his wee garden |
painted, paths and steps are being repaired. New greenhouses are
being erected as well as sheds, and patios being constructed to allow
more enjoyable leisure time. There is a move to get back to nature
and kids are very much involved as parents want to show them where
food comes from. Up at City Road Allotments Karen is helping young
Dino with a natural bug garden and pond with
tadpoles
so he can see them grow into frogs which hopefully will help to keep
the slugs down.
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Luke and mum get ready for the Parkour challenge |
Another
chap is building a Wendy House for the kids who now are frequent
visitors to our site. On
another
plot Jane is very much inspired to indulge in her creative poetry
sitting blissful amongst the flowers and plants she enjoys growing.
On my plot I now have the time to indulge in taking
gardening
up one level. This year I am growing sweet peas to exhibition
standards having been taught those skills sixty years ago up at
Camperdown nursery (now a zoo) where we grew a few hundred for
council functions. I never forgot the method. Lockdown has curtailed
our allotment committee activities, so there is no longer any plot
inspections and vacant plots are not re let but
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Jane writes some poetry |
volunteers
still plant up these vacant plots and we offer produce to passers by
with baskets of
vegetables
and fruit for free left outside the gate on City Road. Another couple
of friends, Frank and Anne decided to install a hot tub in the garden
to enjoy a wee bit of lockdown in luxury. Friends over in Glasgow are
digging up the lawn to give more space to growing vegetables with
help from the kids. Their garden is terraced on several levels with
fences. Just the perfect location for young Luke to create a Parkour
free running, jumping, climbing trail for charity encouraged by
Captain Tom Moore’s very successful charity walk. Luke who is only
7 years old raised £300 for charity.
Wee
jobs to do this week
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Pumpkins and courgettes just planted |
Early June is a good
time to plant courgettes and pumpkins. The long spell (six weeks) of
sunny dry weather brought on the plants faster than normal so I was
ready to plant at the end of May, then along came a couple of days of
gales, but I had my plants under fleece so no harm was done. These
plants are gross feeders so need fertile soil and plenty of moisture,
so if dry weather prevails keep the hose going. Give the plants
plenty of room especially the pumpkins as they like to grow.
END