Sunday 11 December 2011

December

Not much to report really. We've been continuing to make our new beds, Baz has spent more time up here than me. We now have quite a few beds with green manure growing in them, including some we did recently with forage peas.

Me and Baz have totally different ways of sowing seeds, me being ocd about it, and Baz being more carefree and wild, so my beds will be all uniform and Baz's will look more ad-hoc! I wish I could be less anal about it, it would save time.


 Here you can see it all coming together! We've done a lot in just a few months and all the greenery you can see is green manure!
 Our makeshift pond with Buddha keeping watch for frog activity.
 Me sowing forage pea seeds.
 Not sure why I am so grumpy here.
 Baz spotted this fox! Beautiful.

Ok well, think the blog will be pretty quiet until the spring, but I will update as and when. See ya.
-x-

Monday 7 November 2011

Bonfire night weekend

Ok so been very slack with updating the blog...

Since I last wrote we've been carrying on with building our beds and digging over the soil and planting green manure. We had a bonfire on bonfire night, which was great, had a few people there, had some vegan hot dogs and watched the nearby fireworks. My friend Suzanne and her daughter made a cool guy...









 The next day we went for about an hour, stuck some more stuff on the fire and I dug over some soil in one of the beds...



The whole place is looking so different now than a couple of months ago. It's taking shape which is cool, although it's obviously a long way from all being finished, not that it's probably ever going to be 'finished' as such.

-x-

Monday 26 September 2011

Stockfree September

Haven't posted for nearly two months, the plot is looking pretty different these days. We have entered into PHASE 4 as Baz likes to put it, which means we have started work on changing the plot to how we want it rather than maintaining how it was when we took it over.


Here is the plan:




Here is what the plot looked like on Day 1:




and how it's looking today on Day 147:




We had a good yield of crops over the summer, we're still digging up potatoes as and when we need them (as I write I am frying some for my breakfast...) and picking from a seemingly everlasting supply of summer squash:




This is really gross, but the woodlice like to burrow in through the base of the squashes, so if you don't pick them early enough, there are several tiny woodlice crawling around inside the bottom. Ewwww.


What else have we harvested recently? Well partly thanks to my friend's little girl, Oiana, who did an ace job of picking fruit and veg for us on Saturday, this week we have had:
-potatoes
-summer squash
-chard
-spinach
-raspberries
-carrots
-mizuna
-onions
-kohl rabi


Which is pretty good seeing as we put in fairly minimal effort over the summer. The carrots did pretty badly, I don't know whether it was because they all came from seed packs given to us and they were a bit old, or whether it's because the soil wasn't very fertile. It could also be due to my sowing skills, I tend to mess up sometimes with putting the seeds in too deep. It's probably a combination of these things, and probably other reasons that I don't know about due to my lack of veg growing experience.


So, how has it worked so far, starting up a vegan organic plot? Well, due to the fact that me and Baz have been living under the poverty line this year because I was too ill to work and not eligible for any ESA or the like, we haven't been able to buy anything really other than the odd bit of netting and a couple of hosepipe parts to replace the ones which mysteriously went missing, apparently it could have been me leaving them on the tap, but that's doubtful, even given the fact that Baz saw me walk away from the tap yesterday and go back 30 seconds later because I had...ahem...left the bit on the tap. (Damn, he caught me). Anyway, so had we been able to purchase things for the allotment since we took it on in April, we would have, I'm sure, been able to buy some things related to having an organic, stockfree* plot. But here's what we've done so far:


-not used horse manure on our soil like most other people on the site (reason: all the nutrients that have gone into a horse when they are grazing and then through their body and out the other end, well these are better acquired first-hand, directly from things like compost and green manure).


-put all our veggie waste from home into a compost heap along with all suitable stuff when clearing on the plot like certain weeds. And then mixed in some 'browns' like cardboard. And added things like seaweed from Hove beach, and watered it to keep it moist.


-not killed any bugs (knowingly), and moving slugs to the corner of the plot until we figure out where else to put them


-not using any slug killer or any other pest control other than removing with our hands and relocating


-not using any chemicals or weed killer or anything that would be harmful to us or the soil and crops


-sown lots of green manure seed in the last week- we bought two types of mustard seed. When the time is right this can be fed into the soil to create lovely fertile soil for our veg growing.


-put a whole load of nettles in a large container, filled it with water, waited until it stank and then used it to feed the soil/veg


There might be some other things, but that's all I can think of at the moment. It feels lonely sometimes doing it this way because although most of the people on our site probably do some organic stuff with their plot, I don't think there are many people doing it the vegan organic way. This website is really useful which I've posted a link to before: http://www.veganorganic.net/index.php There is also this article which I just found on the Vegan Society's website: http://www.vegansociety.com/resources/food-security/international-development.aspx 


Ok well, I'll leave you with a selection of pictures from the last 6 weeks..........


Above: a meal Baz made a few weeks back- almost everything in this is from our allotment, apart from the lentils and sunflower seeds.

Above: the nettle stuff.
Above: the first of the new beds under some netting.


Above: two more new beds marked out by slabs and whatever that black stuff is called.

Above: kohl rabi- really lovely grated and eaten raw.



Hope you've enjoyed reading this. I've enjoyed writing this a lot. It has been roughly a year since my anxiety flared up again and led me to being depressed. It has taken a lot of courage and determination to get through it, I came off an anti-depressant back in March, which was pure hell, but I am lucky to have several people in my life who have supported me so much and now I hope that the worst is behind me and I can look forward to enjoying life again, getting really stuck in at the allotment, and enjoying my time there and at home planning all the cool things me and Baz are going to do there.........like having a bug hotel.
-x-


*stockfree = any system of cultivation that avoids artificial chemicals and sprays, livestock manures and animal remains from slaughterhouses (http://www.veganorganic.net/information-sheets/4-vegan-organic-growing-the-basics)

Sunday 7 August 2011

errrrr........

Hmmmm... don't exactly have that much to report. Been up to allotment three or four times since last post- first time was to tidy the back area, then just been up to weed and water, and then today went with Baz for a few hours.

Here is what the back bit looks like now:


I know this probably doesn't seem that impressive, but it looked worse before, honestly.


Picked our first runner beans today! So exciting!!! I think I picked about 6!!! Woop!

Here's Baz getting some chard, which we ate tonight for our dinner, yum.

I transplanted the kohl rabi today. Sadly none of the cauliflower came through...


 Was pretty excited to see that our squash/pumpkins had started to turn orange!! Think they are pumpkins after all.


This is what we harvested today: potatoes, raspberries, blackberries, one beetroot, chard, our first onions
We also got given by Andy a bottle of apple juice which is really tasty.

I'm sorry this has been the most boring update ever, I will endeavour (that's a good word isn't it....) to make it more fun to read/look at next time......
-x-

Tuesday 26 July 2011

The third phase!!!

20.07.11.
According to Baz we are now in Phase 3 at our allotment. Personally I see it just as a gradual journey, heading towards Perfect Plot, which I know is unrealistic but the perfectionist in me can't help but strive for, well, perfection of course. I think Baz is right in a way though. Phase 1 being the first month or so when it was all 'CLEAR!' 'DIG!' 'QUICK, SOW SOW SOW!'; Phase 2 being 'Oh shit, why is nothing we put in from seed growing?' and 'ooh look, the potatoes are doing sooo well!' and 'ah, we've done really well in such a short space of time, look at how much we've done'. So unless I am totally mistaken, and believe me I am totally mistaken about a hundred times a day so it is quite likely in this case, Phase 3 signifies our second attempt at sowing a load of stuff and starting to harvest stuff ie potatoes.

Sooooo........here are some pictures as always. I know of the three or four people that look at this blog, probably only one, my loving partner, actually reads this so it's all about the pictures.....

 We thought we might have killed these potato plants, but we found these!!
 Aww...
 Our first potato crop!!
 Mmmm [vegan] buttery potatoes with mint...yummy.
 Aww again...
 Put in some spinach and yet more carrots....


 Sort of awww, depending on whether you like hornets (is that what it is?), for Baz it's more like 'Bahhh, shit, run!'
 A bird had used plastic in this nest, which was bizarre to see.
 Baz cleared a lot of the plants etc in front of the shed, and now we have an official bike resting place.

 There was a lot of rain, as you can see...

 Taking shelter from the rain and drawing up a plan of our crops.

Oh. We attempted to cook jacket potatoes in the bbq coal but they pretty much turned into charcoal...
-x-

26.07.11

The raspberry patches had really been doing my head in ever since we took on the plot. They were overrun with weeds and plants and dead canes and brambles...so as the old raspberry canes which have fruited already had started to die, and they needed cutting down, I got to work and tidied it all up. SO satisfying, if a little time consuming (seeing as I do everything in an ocd manner). So it all looks lovely now and you can actually see the individual raspberry plants and it will be so much easier to harvest the next lot of fruit.


 Aww...
 So our compost heap is pretty high now.
 Oh My God- BEANS!!! I was really unsure as to whether any beans would appear...but today I spotted these!!!

Feeling a lot more positive about the allotment these last few days, which is such a relief. What it means really is that I am feeling a bit better in myself, so slowly but surely the things which I used to enjoy are coming back to me, reminding me that life can be good, there is a point to all of this and I can look to the future once more.

-x-