Posts Tagged ‘Gardening’

July Gardening – The Great Summer Deal

Monday, June 21st, 2010

I dare not predict the weather. It’s looking good at the moment and the barbeques are running well but I don’t have the resources of the Met Office or the BBC, or even an old strand of sea weed, so I will resist the temptation of putting my head on the block and say what a great summer we are going to have because it could all change in the next month or so. We live on an island. Surrounded by water, much affected by tides and in the northern hemisphere. That means the weather can be changeable to say the least. In the centre of continental Europe the challenge is less as weather systems tend to be more stable and more predictable. Actually weather charts recently have been quite encouraging, nice area of high pressure over our bit and a dirty great smear of rain bearing cloud from Germany down to the South of France. Gardening at this time of the year is absolutely wonderful; you can hear things growing. I look at my vegetable patch and I can see the difference from day to day and that gives me a real boost especially as it seems to have been such a long time and has involved so much effort in actually producing anything remotely edible. I blame the late frosts and the cold winter but the soil did seem to take a long time to warm up and some of the early sowings were less than productive.

I have managed to get out and about a bit and am not long back from a late spring trip to visit my expatriated brother-in-law in the Czech Republic; fascinating country and still has much of the elements of its communist past still in place. Severe, gaunt grey buildings and rather dismal residential areas. There are some very beautiful historic buildings and dramatic castles that have been brought back to life. It’s a habit that I probably share with other gardeners, but I always like to have a look at what other peoples gardeners are like. Food in Czech Republic is not as varied as Dorset and garden produce seems to be mostly potatoes, onions and broad beans. It’s too cold to overwinter brassica crops so if you grow dense white cabbages you have to harvest and store before mid November. Salad crops seemed to be a rarity but it might be that they hadn’t sown them yet although the tomatoes were well up and planted out. There was a definite change since our last visit with evidence of new buildings in the villages and more ornamental gardens. Fruit trees still line the roads leading to the village; in the old days villagers ask the village organising committee if they could look after a particular tree [all numbered] and harvest the crop. That would be an excellent scheme here I think and a worthwhile extension of the allotment system.

Gardening month by month – Summer Goodies

Friday, August 14th, 2009

I want to make two points. Bear with me, rather than bare with me which is a totally different concept and one which would be out of place in the majority of gardening columns.

Firstly, the weather. Ok, don’t be cross – I know I promised you a good summer this year, and I know July has been wet rather than dry, but look at it this way. We have had some really useful rain which has replenished the soil moisture level and will keep things going longer. So, if, as I fervently hope, we have a cracking August, then the grass, the veg patch, the borders and the shrubberies will all do better than if we were bone dry at this point.

Secondly, your garden produce. This is the exciting bit. I don’t know if it is just that all the cookery writers try and publish books either in the summer to get on your summer reading list or just before Christmas to get on your gift list, but books and especially magazine articles abound with great ideas for summer cooking and using the fruits of your labours.

I like to cook,; I am not a great cook but I have never poisoned anyone with my efforts. I usually fall down on meal timings – blokes do. Veg ready an hour before the meat, that sort of thing. But I’m getting better, and I’m really enjoying outdoor cooking. Gas or charcoal barbeques with lids [that is really important otherwise you are very limited in what you can do just on a hot grill], This is partly tied to the fact that one of the heating elements in the oven packed up a while ago and I haven’t got round to fixing it yet, so the barbeque is the quicker option! I am lucky in having a bit of cover I can cook under and watch the rain from as I sip a cool beer or nice little rose`.

There are so many ways of cooking food and the shorter the distance between the place it was grown and the place it is cooked, the better. Salads picked, washed and served with 30 minutes! The only way to get anything fresher would be to graze it where it grows. We all have our favourite writers and publications. Personally Guardian or Observer foodie bits are usually good, and by that I mean manageable and I do read Nigel Slater. Good unpretentious stuff. And that’s it really, maximum pleasure from actually using the things that you grow. Life does not get any better than that.

Guerrilla Gardening hits Gillingham

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009
Guerrilla Gardening Hits Gillingham

Guerrilla Gardening Hits Gillingham

Mysteriously, overnight the Orchard Park Roundabout on Shaftesbury Road has sprouted flowers! It happened just in time for the summer visitors and has brightened up a bit of a dead spot.

The roundabout has been sadly neglected and was only mown every now and then so as one of the main entry points to Gillingham it was certainly lacking in pizzazz. The soil here is very poor and the guerrilla gardeners went to the trouble of installing five attractive raised beds made out of treated half round timber.

A mass of locally grown [Mere] geraniums are getting their roots down and with a bit of good weather should put on a show until the autumn. Who knows what will happen then!

The roundabout is at the entrance to Gillingham’s garden centre Orchard Park. Richard Cumming, who runs the business there, said “ I have absolutely no idea how the planters got there but it does make a wonderful difference. We have been in discussion with the local council for some considerable time about landscaping the roundabout but we are still trying to sort out costs with them as apparently we are going to have to pay business rates if we sponsor it.”

So, in the meantime Orchard Park have said that they will gladly look after the flowers and keep the grass cut, and have promised the guerrilla gardeners a bit of help with an autumn or winter display when the time comes.

Want more information?

Contact Richard Cumming, Orchard Park, Shaftesbury Road, Gillingham SP8 5PX