24 March 2026

In earnest at the allotment

A small ornamental garden in early spring;  there are various shrubs and small trees, with a few spring flowers;  a brown hen is off to the right.  A shed roof and two houses are slightly visible, with a blue sky behind
My ornamental garden with orange flowering berberis to the center, Kordia cherry tree to the right, and a Birthday chicken, March 2026
Now past spring equinox, things are starting to move a bit quicker, myself included.  Every day for the past week--excluding Saturday as we all attended the son's orchestra concert instead--I've been at the allotment getting work done.  In fact, on the school days, I've been twice a day:  both before dropping off the daughter from school and after finishing work but before picking her up.  

In the first instance I sowed a prepared bed with beet seeds, and covered it with insect mesh to keep birds/cats digging it up (I generally cover all my beds at the allotment after sowing/planting, at least until the plants are established).  

Then the daughter and I spent several days on the snap pea bed:  it had been newly sheet mulched with wood chips so we moved aside the mulch and laid down rows of compost, dug from the bottom of our composters.  Then we sowed the pre-sprouted peas over the course of two days and lightly sprinkled mulch back on top.  Finally, another sheet of mesh for protection.

 Another job which the whole family participated in:  planting out potatoes.  The daughter and I put down two short rows of seed potatoes I'd saved over winter (I grew them last year but these few were too green to eat).  A few days later I bought 1 kg of Charlotte seed potatoes to fill the rest of the bed, and the son and husband got these ones down (the ones I'd saved were also Charlottes).  Like last year, I'm growing them no-dig:  we raked aside the existing straw mulch to expose bare soil, placed the sprouting potatoes directly on it, and then covered them thickly with well-composted horse bedding (straw/manure).  I will give them one more layer of the less composted bedding--mostly straw--to prevent weeds sprouting on top.

And in addition to putting things down, I'm also taking things up:  regular picking of leeks and rhubarb (at the weekend I made a compote with some frozen strawberries we'd picked at a farm last summer) and I've started on the purple sprouting broccoli.  I was also very excited to see the new asparagus poking up, though I won't pick any this spring.  At home I'm also picking a little more chard, and some new season mizuna and lambs lettuce.

17 March 2026

A few jobs here and there

Our three new ducks, now designated the Snowflake Ducks (or Snowflakes), are still enclosed in their temporary yard and not hiding in their little coop quite so much.  They don't like us coming too close but will hopefully get used to us being out in the garden as time goes on.  They've been with us just over a week and I'm not ready to let them mingle with the old ducks.  Maybe after another week.  Moving from a barn/farm to a garden/free range is enough of a big scary change--I want them settled in before they face Boy Duck and his territorial aggression.

We've had two birthdays in the past week so not a lot of garden/allotment action has happened.  The son and I managed to get to the allotment on Sunday for sheet mulch;  in addition, I picked some leeks and rhubarb and prepared a bed for beet seeds (hopefully to sow within the next day or two).  What's more, I even caught enough of a sunny spell to wander around the garden with a pair of secateurs and prune my remaining roses, currants and grape vine.  

I've pricked out several trays of early seedlings now (but still more to go), and have started some snap peas in a jar;  I like to soak/pre-sprout my peas and beans before sowing.  And at last a few broad beans are sprouting up at the allotment, after sowing more than a month ago.   I'll need to start clearing weeds and spent plants in my kitchen garden so I can begin sowing there:  I'll be focusing mainly on root crops at home this year.  I like to rotate what I grow there, and last year was mainly brassicas and leeks.

A friend gave me a couple of small potted fruit trees (belonging to her relative who died recently):  a pear and a Bramley apple.  I've wanted a Bramley or other cooking apple for a while now, ever since the big feral tree in the next village over was bulldozed:  we used to pick a couple of sacks every autumn, and they lasted several months on trays in our living room.  I already have a lot of fruit trees, and two other apple trees besides!  Nevertheless we were able to tuck the Bramley in the back corner of our garden.  I also already have a Kumoi pear so the little pear tree might go to the allotment later on;  it's now in a very large container and I'll have to decide if I want to leave it or plant it out.

10 March 2026

New ducks

Three white ducks next to a wire fence and a wooden shed with bare ground and some greenery around them
New ducks, March 2026
After several years of trying for some more ducks, we have finally adopted another three females.  We like having ducks, which are excellent at slug hunting, and also lay very nice eggs.  The eggs are just a nice bonus in my view;  pest control is the main draw for me.  We haven't quite settled on a cohort name (we no longer name individually, but as a group) though the daughter has suggested the White Ducks.  Not a bad name!  But we have had a group of White Ducks in the past, so we might think about it a little longer.

The son and I fenced off the small section of garden next to the chicken yard, also enclosing our old chicken tractor in with them;  our two old ducks shun any sort of shelter--they were even sleeping out in the snow this winter--but the new ones have been raised in a barn and aren't used to the open.  We'll keep them enclosed for a week or two while the other ducks free range, to let them get used to each other.  Last time we introduced new ducks, Boy Duck took all summer to finally accept them.  I hope they can get along sooner this time, not least because there are more new ducks than old.  I won't lock them in a yard together until I'm sure everyone is friends.

Boy Duck and Girl Duck are around 8 years old now;  while I don't know how long ducks normally live, I feel like 8 is pretty old.  None of our other ducks lived that long.  These three new ducks are around 12 weeks old, so I hope we get at least 8 years with them too.  Or at least I hope they outlive Boy Duck, as the last duck standing needs to be a girl:  the only reason the ducks live separately to the chickens is because Boy Duck is such a jerk to them--otherwise all our birds could live in one mixed flock.  And of course one duck can't live on its own;  they need a flock or they get too stressed. 

03 March 2026

The start of spring, and everything

There has been sowing.  There has been pruning.  There has even been repotting (I put my three small blueberry bushes into one very large container).  The sun has come out:  is it spring yet?  I think it just might be.

While I'm reminding myself not to go overboard like last year, I've been feeling the sunshine like a gentle push to action.  Time to go outside;  time to do something out there.  I'm also reminding myself that I want a more analog life--I need to get out and do stuff, not be attached to a screen like I have been for many of the dark days of winter.  

I am continuing the sheet mulch at the allotment (son has helped me a little), and I'm still happily pulling leeks.  I picked the last of the overwintered beets--surprised to find any worth picking actually--and possibly the last of the chard, as it looks like it's starting to go to seed.  I also sowed those last February seeds (cherry tomatoes and chilis, though I'm not confident about the latter);  and started sowing March seeds too:  Savoy cabbage, early leeks, spring onions.  No sign of the broad beans yet.  I've pricked out the plum toms and bulb onions, sown at the start of February;  the onions went outside in their tray, in the most sheltered spot on the patio--hope they don't get too cold after their indoor start.

March is the time though, the time it all kicks off for real.  Though I'm easing into it, there's a little sense of urgency:  let's get some stuff done before time runs out. 

24 February 2026

Stalled...

After a prolonged rainy spell--the news had it at 40+ days--we've finally seen the sun again.  Unfortunately for my garden/allotment, I've had other commitments take precedence, and I haven't done much work in either for the past week, despite it being half term week and no school for the kids and no work for me (I work at a school).  We are undertaking a home improvement project, forecast to take several weeks.

In the small amount of time I've spent outside I've up laundry, let chickens out for free range, and picked a few cabbage leaves for dinner.  The kitchen garden is looking very sparse now, just a couple of very small cabbages of various types.  I'm hoping the sad looking spring cabbages will perk up and start to grow again, but I'm not very confident about the Savoys;  they've been there about six months and I feel they ought to have done something by now.  I guess the Savoy seed was pretty old though the spring seed was new when I sowed it last autumn.

At the allotment things are just a bit better, with a good amount of leeks still and maybe a bit of chard from two self sown plants.  However, I have to actually visit if I want to eat it;  I've not been for a full week.  I've been pulling about five leeks at a time, to tide me over till the next stop, but I ran out and haven't been back.  I'll stop by after work at least one day this week, maybe today.  

It's about time for me to start revving up the indoor seed sowing;  I've only done plum tomatoes and onions so far, both sprouted up now, and soon to be pricked out (I got my broad beans in the ground too).  I have a box of seed packets in my cupboard, organized by month of sowing, and the February slot has been calling my name;  better get into it before it slips by me.

17 February 2026

Sheet mulching and mulching

I've begun sheet mulching again at the allotment.  Truly, I should have been doing it all winter, as my beds emptied.  But you know:  rain, dark, cold, etc.  I didn't.  Technically it's still all of the above, except possibly a little less dark;  however, I've begun at last.  

Actually, I'm experimenting with some wood chips for mulch this year.  The site has always had stables with a manure pile, my go to for mulch (soiled straw);  this has a tendency to sprout new weeds and harbor bugs and slugs.  I anticipate there will be no weed seed hiding in the wood chips, though I can't speak for the pests--possibly woodlice may be a problem.  Still, I'm trying it with the new (and hopefully continuing) supply of wood chips next to the manure pile.  Many people at the allotments have been using the wood chips for their paths.  If I see my next door neighbor there, I may ask her what she thinks about them on the path between us, too.

I don't really mulch at home in the kitchen garden, though every year I dig out some extra good compost from the chicken yard to spread on one bed, in rotation.  I also divvy out the less composted first layer to my fruit trees, as a top dressing.  Though before I start, I need to tidy up the beds:  weeding, clearing spent plants, and so on.  I already let the ducks have a week of slug hunting, but have locked them out again as they trampled a few of my emerging spring bulbs.  I may let them and the chickens in briefly once those flowers are done--if there's time;  I may start planting the beds first.

10 February 2026

Let's start

I'm back in seed sowing mode, a small beginning to a very big job.  Here's where my whole food producing engine starts.  I think I was sowing seeds until around August last year, both in trays/pots and directly in the ground.  Because of all that work, I've had fresh veg for the whole year, even now in February (just picked the last pak choi and white radishes, and no end in sight for the leeks).

This past week I've sown two trays:  chili seeds in one and onion and plum tomato in the other--both wrapped in a plastic bag to act as a little green house, sitting on my kitchen window.  I had to move my spider plants to the north facing living room window with my aloes, as vegetables get priority over houseplants;  facing south, the kitchen gets the maximum of sun of anywhere in the house.

The plum tomatoes came from seed I saved, from a lineage I've been saving for a few years now.  I hope to get about 25 plants.  To save on space they're broadcast into half a tray with the onion seeds.  I sowed some of the same onion seed back in August, which are still growing in containers at the allotment (though I think slugs may have eaten a few).  I may grow the rest of them in the ground in the kitchen garden;  I'm out of containers and when I grew them in the ground at the allotment they didn't amount to much.  I've not had a lot of success growing chili and other hot climate plants from seed but giving it another go.  

And finally I sowed my broad beans at the allotment last week in a sleet shower--I got very wet and muddy.  It didn't matter though:  I had pre-sprouted them at home and needed to get them in the ground before they went bad, whatever the weather.  Luckily I had prepared the rows already, so when I got there it was just a case of placing the seeds, covering them back with soil, and then mulching with some wood chips on top to prevent weeds germinating on top.  I also covered the whole bed with some insect mesh, as a bird/mouse deterrent;  I'll take it off when the plants are a few inches tall.

Close up of two chickens, one with its head out of frame, the other with only its head in frame.
Gratuitous chicken photo:  Rock's head, Speckly's bottom, Feb 2026