It was half term week off school and since I work at a school (in the kitchen) I had it off with the kids. The husband was able to take the week off from his work too, so we had a rare week off all together. What did we do? Very little gardening!
But on a sunny Sunday morning, our last day off together, we all spent two hours doing some work at the allotment. The first job was digging out artichokes and moving some of them to the back of the plot. The rest got cut down to the ground and we dragged a piece of carpet and another piece of rubber sheeting to cover over them (both pieces had been smothering weeds at the back where we moved the artichokes to). Then a lot of wood chips to cover the now bare soil at the back, and my collection of pots and planters filled with overwintering onions on top of the carpet and sheeting.
I will probably have to leave that carpet and sheeting in place all of next growing season, to make sure it kills off what's left of the artichokes--they are very vigorous and we had so much plant matter to clear away first. I prepared a tall stack of old woody stems to make a bonfire later.
On the same day I cleared away the remaining plum tomato plants and collected the fruits: about eight pounds of mainly green ones. We put down some large cardboard sheets over their bed (right in front of the old artichoke bed) for later sheet mulch. We'd already done a lot of physical work and couldn't face digging out more mulch to pile on top: soon.
In addition to the tomatoes, I also brought home another five cauliflowers, the last few bolting fennel bulbs and a pile of achocha. Oh and a container of wood chips from the pile on site to pour into our chicken yard (I'm trying to collect some at least once a week to soak up the mud). Once home, I started washing and weighing my veg and spent another hour making 6.6 L of green salsa, to ferment. Although it's mostly tomatoes, I also put in most of the fennel, half of the cauliflowers and all of the achocha: all chopped into a chunky paste. Plus a good amount of salt, a handful of minced garlic and 10 small red chilies from a pot on my patio.
That's pretty much it for my allotment jobs until spring. Well, other than routine sheet mulching of bare beds and harvesting winter crops. Maybe about half of the veg beds are still in production. At home, none of my beds are clear yet, though I'm more than halfway through my early leeks (the late leeks are at the allotment). Autumn is winding down and so am I.
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