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  1. #1
    Administrator Lex's Avatar
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    Default Allotment

    I've just taken on an allotment, which I'm in the process of tidying up (the previous holder could no longer commit to it) and digging manure & compost into.
    So far, I'm planning to plant a couple of gooseberry bushes, 2/3 small apple trees, rhubarb and potatoes.
    Does anyone have any tips for vegetables I could plant and whether I should plant seeds straight into the ground in April/May, or start them off in a greenhouse etc?
    Last edited by Lex; 04-02-2017 at 10:37 PM.

  2. #2
    rebbonk
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    Way out of my sphere Lex. -Too much like hard work!

  3. #3
    Administrator Lex's Avatar
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    I'm going for a semi-low maintenance approach which, after the initial work, shouldn't need too much effort outside the planting & harvesting seasons beyond weeding and watering, so I hopefully won't get too worn out from it.

  4. #4
    cathidaw
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    When my son rented a house in Eynsham the garden was so tiny they rented an allotment a short cycle ride away for somewhere to sit in. Being archaeologists and used to digging they soon cleared their patch and laid a lawn around the shed. which was used to house a calor stove for tea -and snacks of course and comfy garden chairs for lounging on warm evenings.
    The elders who had been there for years disapproved and gave them all sorts of advice hinting that lounging around was not what an allotment was for. So they threw in a few exotic seeds including flowers. and a packet of rocket , to shut them up, and spent that summer after work, enjoying time off. No one spoke except to ask what the plants were.
    That summer , the allotments were plagued by rabbits-you can imagine what happened-but not to this plot. All the others-not a carrot, or whatever they grew, was left. When I went to see them, it was just before their job finished and had to move house to another part of the country The whole of the plot was surrounded by rocket and flowers. Lovely.
    So if you get a bit tired get a stove and a shed and comfy chairs and you've got it made.
    Who said an allotment is only to grow veg.unless it all goes back to the wartime years.
    Good luck.
    Not advice as such--I'd do the same if I hadn't got a big garden.
    Last edited by cathidaw; 10-02-2017 at 12:11 PM.

  5. #5
    Administrator Lex's Avatar
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    Thanks Cathi. The apple trees, rhubarb and gooseberry bushes are in place, and another allotment holder has given me some raspberry canes. The shed's going up this weekend as well.

  6. #6
    cathidaw
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    Good -you need a shed, what good is an allotment without one.Your sanctuary.
    Not the same as one in the garden. Altho' my dad had one in the garden and no-one else was allowed in it.
    Every year he painted it with whatever paint he could 'borrow' from wherever he worked so we never knew what colour it was going to be.

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