The Green Village Articles for the ‘Grow Your Own’ Category

Time to Prepare – Getting your Veg Plot Ready for Spring

As the first rays of sunshine peer through the clouds we’re given an inkling that maybe, just maybe spring could be around the corner. Of course things can change so quickly we’ll probably be scraping frost from the windscreen before setting off to work by the end of the week, but we can but hope! One thing for sure however, is that now is the time for preparation.

As the cold winter days are starting to subside and the ground is warming up, now is the ideal time to get yourself outside into the fresh air and start to tend to the Veg Plot. Although sowing seeds is not a good idea, as they will likely rot, digging in manure and making repairs to raised beds or building new ones are good jobs for the winter months and will help keep you warm while you work.

If you don’t feel quite ready to don the wellies yet however, you can always get the seed preparations underway. Garden centres are full of displays of seeds, onion sets and seed potatoes. However the first stage isn’t necessarily to go and throw ten packets of veg seeds in a basket just to feel as though you’ve done something. An hour or two spent laying out some plans for what you want to grow and designing the layout for the year would be time well invested. (more…)

It’s Allot of Fun!

What with Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall’s recent series transforming a piece of derelict land in a Bristol estate into a miniature urban smallholding, and the increasing price of food showing no signs of slowing, growing your own food is becoming an ever more attractive proposition. And what better way to do it than with an allotment?

There are so many advantages to having an allotment that it’s hard to understand why more people don’t do it. Not only is it a more cost-effective way of getting your food – allotment rents can be from as little as £5 a year and often don’t go far over £35 a year – leaving you with extra pennies to put aside for a rainy day or give yourself a little treat, but it can also be a great way of meeting new people and sharing tips and knowledge.

Many people are into allotment gardening for the long haul so you can easily track down the more experienced allotmenteers to give you a hand. Whether you are trying to find out what the best varieties of vegetables are that wll do well in the soil type on your plot or want to identify which pesky beasties have been helping themselves to your crops, there will always be somebody to ask. (more…)