THE ALLOTMENT WORKOUT
Gardening can be an
exhausting hobby. As an apprentice gardener we were often used as a source of
cheap labour. The Parks dept grew fields of potatoes and Swedes at Camperdown
park for the schools kitchens and it was us that planted, weeded and lifted
them, as well as sorting, cleaning, bagging and lifting the hundred weight
sacks into stacks for storing. We were always competitive so hard work to us
was fun, and as a wee treat we got a small bag of tatties home.
Digging drains by
hand at Dawson Park all winter, as the machine kept breaking down, was also our
task. We must have had plenty energy, as me and my fellow apprentice lived in
St. Mary’s and we cycled to work each day. In the early sixties Dundee embarked
on a programme of bringing flowers to the town so we grew roses by the
thousand. All rose beds got double dug two feet deep adding in plenty of manure
but the hard work was rewarded when the roses came into flower.
Today I have a fair
sized garden plus an allotment, and as all works have to be done by the book,
so single digging and double digging where necessary still have to get done.
Planting potatoes |
It is a modern idea
that the nation needs to get fit, so going to the gym for a workout is quite
popular and fashionable. However it is not cheap and at times the repetitive
exercises can be a wee bit boring, so I analysed all my gardening activities
and reckon that getting an allotment will give you just as much exercise, but
at a fraction of the cost. Annual renting of a plot of land is well below £50 a
year. Add to that all the very fresh fruit and vegetables available all year
round makes allotment life a better option to keep fit with added health
benefits of fresh produce.
Shredding prunings at City Road allotments |
During the winter
months there is the digging, manuring, pruning fruit bushes and trees, then
shredding the prunings which get wheel barrowed up steep paths to the compost
heap. Any permanent planting of fruit trees and bushes will require soil to be
double dug.
Then on dry days
fences need fixing and sheds and greenhouses are sure to need repairs to keep
them wind and water free.
In spring we break
down the soil and rake it level ahead of sowing and planting. Deep furrows are
needed for potato planting adding some compost to the bottom of the trench,
then earthing them up.
The compost heap is
beginning to build up, so it will need turning over to help fresh garden and
kitchen waste to rot down. This task will need repeating another twice in
summer and autumn.
As seedlings begin
to grow they will need thinning out and weeds will take over unless you get
down to soil level. Gardeners always develop strong backs with all this
bending, and it doesn’t get any better with age as your sight is not as good as
previous so you need to bend even closer to the ground so you can tell the weeds
from the rows of seedlings.
Harvesting the Red Devil apples |
Summer is when we
get our rewards for all the hard work as we pick our first strawberries,
raspberries, peas and the first of our early potatoes. Then as the temperatures
rise we can relax on the patio with a small glass of Saskatoon, blackcurrant or
apple homebrew. However these moments of sheer heaven are short lived as the
harvesting season kicks in with a very heavy crop of broad beans, picking the
whole crop in the morning, get the beans out of the pods, remove the skins from
each seed, then bag up for the freezer, to be completed so we can sit down and
relax before the ten o’clock news comes on. Then it is the onions to lift and
dry off, followed by sweet corn.
Autumn now kicks in
and serious harvesting begins with potatoes then apples, plums and pears.
When you look back
over the year, you begin to wonder if membership of a local gym might be no
such a bad idea.
Wee jobs to do this week
As new crops begin
to grow but will take several weeks to use up their allotted space, sow some
quick maturing catch crops such as radish, salad leaves or rocket.
End