How to Rebuild Your Allotment with Little Gardening Experience
Barry Ng
7 days ago
Featured Answer
Sort by:Oldest
Comments (8)
Related Discussions
How much room to allot when trellising melons
Comments (6)Thanks, all. My hope was to encourage the vines to spread laterally rather than upward on the trellis, which is how I grow my cucumbers. At the end of the day, I guess the plants themselves will let me know what they need and I can always add some height to my cattle panels. Nc-cm, my plan for the large melons is to put them on small adjustable height "stools" I'm welding up. Picture a tall stake with a frame atop and some old cut up rope hammock stretched over the frame. I'll train the vines onto the trellis and wherever a watermelon forms I'll set up a support for it. This is all to help streamline my lawncare... things got unmanageable growing pumpkins and melons on the ground last year, and I have little time as it is for such things. More time spent gardening and playing with my kids, less time mowing and such is the goal. Again, i appreciate the advice!...See MoreNew to Organic Allotment Gardening
Comments (13)Wow! Thanks, everyone! I was a little worried over the strength of my reply to Pudgy, and in hindsight I feel I should of let it pass much more gracefully. It's an easy thing to get hold of 'the wrong end of the stick' :) Yes, I'm increasingly unsure of whether six-months will be long enough to eradicate the worst of the perennial weeds, especially considering I've put it down during the dormant winter months (although I'm hoping it's dark colour will cause the soil underneath to warm quickly next year and fool them into thinking it's an early spring) :) I'll probably follow your suggestions of using a cardboard or newspaper layer to try and keep them down if they do still give an appearance, and I have (the fool's?) hope that if I'm prepared to 'keep at em' eventually they'll decide elsewhere is better. Also, one of my reasons for going to town over the depth of the trenches I dug to secure the sheeting, was that I'm considering cutting one side off at soil-level leaving a 'barrier wall' in place against reinvasion. Is this a good idea do you think? Personally I'm in two minds over the thought of leaving a piece of plastic in the ground. Over here (UK) I'm pretty sure most allotments came into being during the Second World War as a way for townsfolk to add to their supplies ('Dig for Victory' was the slogan). Interesting it's where this idea of digging a garden over each year was started. People with previously little or no experience of growing food crops looked at pictures of farms in books (all their prior knowledge), saw that farmers tilled large fields, and tried to recreate the scene in their gardens and allotments. This was a mistake as it's increasingly being proven, I've read, that small beds tended from the edges are best all round (from the soil's and yield's perspectives). This 'no-dig' method's the one I'm going to adopt first on my allotment I think. Cheers again, all! Tim Here is a link that might be useful: My Allotment Blog...See MoreHow goes your garden and your soil prep?
Comments (28)Dave and Paul raise good points. One has to also be very careful of self-appointed "International Inspectors" who prey on children, the elderly, and the infirm. Sometimes they call on the telephone -- if you listen closely, you can hear the sound of other hustlers working their pitch in the background -- but more often, they spam people on the Internet. First, they claim to have access to "tons" of "prime organic compost" which their family inherited or gained through close association with a corrupt government. Second, they plead for your help moving the compost to a "secure and trusted" location. Then, they offer a 20-50% cut to any "honest friend" who will help. Truth is, there is no such compost. Gardeners who take these hustlers at their word soon find there are "customs fees" and "port clearances" which must be paid. These villains will stop at nothing. They have been known to take the last dime out of the bank accounts of decent gardeners, and still keep asking for more. Don't be a victim. Stick with reputable International Inspectors. None of us will ever demand a fee for certification -- it's against our professional code -- and we all follow established standards, such as the one gallon minimum required for thorough scientific testing. All the best, -Patrick from the CotU Compost Testing Facility (CCTF)...See MoreRebuilding a family cottage garden, not really restoring it.
Comments (25)Okay, so very sorry. I really love this forum and I don't want to upset or confuse anyone. My father, wife, and myself are Romanian, my mother is British( but now an American citizen). I live in her house in Connecticut. She got the house from a cousin whose great great, had moved here from England in the 1800's. Anyway, lets set this thread straight. I've now owned the house for three years. the fist year I left the gardens as is, meadow like, very overgrown to the point that statues were obscured by a screen of weeds and vines in a rather post apocalyptic style. The second year, having thinned it all out in the early spring, I laid a brick edging and took back the beds. that same summer I started with perennials. This the third year, I see not everything took, and I left one back walled bed to do as it pleased. A thistle, and some stringy plant along with four cosmos popped up. So early in the summer I planted my tomatoes and peppers there. This looks odd in the very formal walled garden but it worked freeing up time for me to spend on defining the remaining beds. I really know next to nothing of gardening. My property is very shaded and I'm always trying to force sun plants to thrive there with very little success (go figure). You people really have been helpful and I hope to rely on you greatly in the future. I haven't really identified much in my garden because I'm not sure what it all is. The things I buy in the garden center that look amazing on the shelf always look lost in my beds. Weeds seem to like me but if I pull them I lose flowers because I couldn't tell them apart. Sierra, Annette, and Nell, you are wonderful people who cared enough for a fellow gardener to lend a helpful hint. You didn't have all the facts and for that I apologize. My wife once joined a recipe site but left it finding the people were rude and ignoring her questions, passing her over as a novice. The one thing I bragged to her about is how friendly everyone here is. I started this project in honor of my mother who is now in long-term care. I even left her Union jack waving on the flag pole in the back garden. My dream is to have a party for her birthday on the lawn in her old garden all up to date next year. Something for her to sit and relax in. I love coming in and checking this forum, looking at the responses, its now a part of my routine. I'm learning a great deal from the entrees. I only put water on my plants, I do nothing to the soil and I rarely use miracle-gro. This always worked for my mother but she seemed to have a talent for these things. I do recall her adding fresh cow manure and a white powder called rabbits blood, I think? But to what, and when, I'm not sure. I don't do annuals because I'm too cheap and nothing from seed ever grown much for me. I love my cone flowers and my black-eyed-susans but I'd be grateful for some red in the garden too. My lavender never grows as it did for her and my bee-balm puts on a good show only in parts of the garden. So you see. I enjoy this place immensely and I not only want to, but need to learn from you all. Thanks, Mihai...See Morefloral_uk z.8/9 SW UK
6 days agogardengal48 (PNW Z8/9)
6 days agoSigrid
6 days agofloral_uk z.8/9 SW UK
6 days ago
Related Stories

EDIBLE GARDENSFood and Community Thrive in a U.K. Allotment Garden
Get a peek at a rented garden plot in England where edibles and flowers mix and local residents can mingle
Full Story
GARDENING GUIDES10 Easy Edibles for First-Time Gardeners
Focus on these beginner-friendly vegetables, herbs, beans and salad greens to start a home farm with little fuss
Full Story
GARDENING AND LANDSCAPINGWorld of Design: 10 Home Gardeners Show Us Their Sweet Summer Harvests
From New York to Tokyo, these gardeners have turned their yards, terraces and rooftops into places of bounty
Full Story
GARDENING GUIDESHow to Plan Your Edible Garden
Get organized before you plant to ensure that your fruits and vegetables have a chance to thrive
Full Story
LIFEConsider Avoiding These Plants to Help Keep Your Garden Fire-Safe
Plants that accumulate dead material, are high in oil or have low moisture content in leaves put some homes at risk
Full Story
EARTH DAYGrow a Beautiful Garden With Ecofriendly Greywater
Reducing home water waste means lower bills and a healthier planet. Here's how to set up a greywater home irrigation system that can help
Full Story
GARDENING GUIDESGarden-Friendly Native Alternatives to Overplanted Exotics
There are lots of gorgeous, wildlife-friendly native plants ready to make an appearance in your garden
Full Story
LANDSCAPE DESIGNYour Mini Guide to Great Garden Edges
Get the scoop on trenches to the skinny on bender board, to help keep your garden beds as tidy as you like
Full Story
GARDENING GUIDESGet a Head Start on Planning Your Garden Even if It’s Snowing
Reviewing what you grew last year now will pay off when it’s time to head outside
Full Story
LANDSCAPE DESIGNFor Garden Drama, Consider the Lowly Boulder
A boulder can be a thing of beauty in the landscape. Here are 10 ways to display them to full effect
Full Story
floral_uk z.8/9 SW UK