The Bones Of My Plot Is Complete & I Nearly Forgot The Bees!

I thought I would start by showing you a beautiful sunrise that I saw from my kitchen window this week.  A beautiful red sky…..and yes this was a warning of rain to come as later in the day it was very wet.

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The sun is rising earlier in the mornings now and after a few sunny days this week, it has really felt like Spring is on its way.

In fact this week I saw the first bee in my garden….

(sorry about the blurred photo as I rushed to capture it before it flew away)

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This made me realise that I have no early flowers for the hungry bees emerging.  I had worked hard over the years at my allotment to have flowers for the bees at all times, but I have to be honest I never gave the lack of flowers in my new kitchen garden another thought until this week.  I had planned to have flowers, but I hadn’t quite got around to planning them yet.

(The photographs below were from my allotment last year).

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So this week I visited my local garden nursery and I managed to buy some cheap ‘Tete-a-Tete’ daffodils. They were priced at £1.50 for four pots, so I planted some between my new fruit trees:

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Also, I bought a pot of later flowering daffodils and three primroses which I used to make up a hanging basket for outside my front door.  Unfortunately the basket did look a bit bare so I stole three of the pansies from the pots outside our back door and this filled out the basket nicely.

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I then turned my attention to pruning.

My bay tree was looking rather overgrown so I gave that a good prune, together with the three ‘Spiraea’ bushes in my front garden.  A good prune always makes the garden look neat doesn’t it.

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I also noticed that weeds were beginning to grow between the slabs in my front garden, so I weeded  them out using my wonderful weeding tool which I brought back from my allotment to use.  It really does make weeding between slabs easy:

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As the front of the house was looking better, I decided that my old front door mat was rediculously dirty and totally unwelcoming and I needed a new one.  I then remembered that somewhere deep in the cupboard under our stairs was a new one that I bought over a year ago, ready for when the building work on our kitchen was complete…..and I had totally forgotten about it!

So I threw our old mat away and placed the new one at our front door and the house definately looks more welcoming now:

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My New Kitchen Garden:

Last weekend I finally finished digging over my new kitchen garden and laying the paths around my fixed beds.

Mr Thrift helped me to buy more soil conditioner from our local nursery and I forked it into the remaining beds.  Incidentally, the soil conditioner I have been using is just £2 per large bag that you fill yourself and it comes from our local ‘green waste’ recycling centre.  It doesn’t have many nutrients in it like compost does, but it does help to improve the soil structure….and my heavy clay soil really needs this.

I also bought some organic manure  to fork into the beds I will be growing potatoes and brassicas in, as these plants are heavy feeders.  I used six bags of manure and each bag cost me £3.25, which is cheap for a bag of manure….however I will be looking at different ways to improve my soil next year.

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It was quite strange (and expensive) buying manure in bags, as I have always has plenty of organic manure at my allotment over the years……the tractor load of manure that I used to have delivered (in the photograph below) would last me for two years at my four allotments and only cost me £25!

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It will take me time to get used to the best way to grow vegetables on a smaller scale.

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This week I also put a plastic sheet over the beds that I will soon be planting my onions into.  Again I brought the plastic sheet back from my allotment, as it is great for warming the soil up a bit earlier.

I also used some of the weed suppressant that I won last year over a couple of beds.  These two beds were where our small lawn was (though it was really a mud patch after all the time I had walked on it while clearing the area).  So I turned the remaining grass upside down as this will help to kill it, together with the weed suppressant placed on top.

Please note I wouldn’t have done this if the grass was couch grass, as this needs to be covered for much longer to kill it completely! 

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I also moved my blueberry plants into their final location.  I have four blueberry plants in pots as they need an acid soil to grow and my soil is alkaline.  I plant the whole pot into the ground, which helps to stop the pots needing so much water in the summer.

I moved them to the shadier side of my new plot, which doesn’t get quite as much sunshine during the day, but this should be fine for them:

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One final thing I did this week in my new kitchen garden was to split the chives that I also bought back from my allotment.  I had just ‘heeled’ them into the ground until I got around to moving them.

I decided to place one small clump next to the path in each bed and eventually I will split them again and again until the path is fully lined with them, as we love chives in our salads and when they flower the bees love them too.

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So after some hard work, the bones of my new kitchen garden is complete and it is now waiting for the soil to warm up so I can begin planting.

As I have ‘fixed’ beds with paths around, I won’t need to tread on the soil again.  I am hoping that this will be the first and last time I will have to dig these beds.

Below are my ‘before’ and ‘after’ photographs…..It was harder work than I thought it would be, due to the stones and rubble that were hidden, the rotten fence and the stumps that I found impossible to dig out of the ground on my own, but I got there in the end.

I am very proud of my new kitchen garden and I can’t wait to grow as many different fruit and vegetables as possible in it.  It will be quite a challenge in such a small space!

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Before:

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After:

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Thank you for reading my blog today.

I will be back next Friday as usual.

 

20 thoughts on “The Bones Of My Plot Is Complete & I Nearly Forgot The Bees!

  1. Our soil is the opposit, I can grow raspberries straight in the ground, but my blue berries need to stay in the pot!
    Your back yard looks like a working garden instead of bushland now. How is your wee doggie coping?

    • Lol, my garden is the same as yours-raspberries in the ground and blueberries in pots.

      Judy has been on the tablets for 5 1/2 wks now (i’ve read they take 4-6 wks to start to work). I have noticed a difference in the house, definately less barking and she now walks and sniffs in the garden (which she never did before as she would just race around like a mad dog)…..until the neighbours dog comes out and then she goes absolutely mental!….however after the event she does calm down a slightly quicker afterwards. I am training on the park twice a week now ( we go out just twice a wk to keep her stress levels down), but I know this is going to be a very long job. One thing she has now started to do though is having messing at my front door when I nip out for an hour every so often, so I have now added this to my training list.

      I love her to bits and I don’t want to give up on her now, but I so wish someone else had picked her to take home….is that bad of me to think?

      • No, I don’t think that’s bad of you to think. I sometimes feel that way about my children and even, God forgive me, my husband!! But I wouldn’t give any of them up, lol!
        I’m glad the tablets are an I provement. Your dog is now pretty much human, as most of the populace takes tablets in some form or other, eh?

    • Couch grass is very annoying, my first allotment was covered in it and the roots can be very long (dispite what we read). I managed to keep on top of mine but my neighbour didn’t so I found I was fighting a losing battle and I had to keep digging out the couch grass that kept spreading onto my plot. One year I planted some nasturtiums (sown in pots ) along the border, just to attract insects and look pretty and amazingly I found that it seemed to somehow keep the couch grass from spreading so much….I still had it but not as much.

  2. wow its looking amazing, what a transformation, you have worked so hard and i am so looking forward to see what you grow.I remember weighing all my produce and costing it one year to actually see how much we had saved, it was an eye opener.
    Have a great week. Sue

    • Yes I did that at my allotment…we saved loads of money even when the costs of seeds etc was taken off. I will be doing that again next year, but this year I want to find out what grows best and where in my new area. I do want to grow lots of tomatoes though as I love making passata with them and it saves us loads of money as I use it alot. One luxury I don’t think I will be growing is sweetcorn as it just takes up so much space….I will miss growing it

  3. So much work, but truly a transformation!

    I have never tested my soil’s pH before. I also have heavy clay and thought that I had read somewhere that clay is acidic. Have I got this wrong? I have azalea, and blueberries, which seem to do fine. Just planted some blueberries straight in the ground at the allotment too, based on the assumption that the heavy clay will be acidic!

  4. You have done so well! I am always inspired after reading your blog- I am going to start digging my grass up tomorrow – patch might be ready for next year!! x

  5. What a wonderful transformation. It must feel great to have tidied up the garden so nicely! Layout looks lovely too. 🙂 Hope you have a good season with good harvests to come.

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