Grow Your Food For Free Preview
Grow Your Food For Free Preview
Grow Your Food For Free Preview
PART 3 SUMMER
16 Growing upwards 152
17 Dealing with weeds 155
18 Feeding plants 157
19 Dealing with pests
and diseases 160
20 Propagating plants 169
21 Making the most of your crops 171
22 Gathering ‘wild’ extras 176
INTRODUCTION
When you shuffle off this mortal coil, would
you like your memories to be of those drives
to an out-of-town retail estate? Will you think
fondly of that time you argued with your
partner all day and filled the back of the car
up with all the things you thought you
needed for your new vegetable plot? Or
perhaps you’d like to reminisce about the day
your new shed was so late that you spent an
hour on hold to a call centre?
WILDLIFE GARDENING
Striking a balance between the natural world A plot in balance with nature is not only a
and the plot you desire can sometimes seem healthy one, it is also one that will be cheaper
like fighting a losing battle. It need not be this to manage as there will be no need for
way, however, as the nearer you come to a expensive measures to combat or protect
natural system the less work you have to do. against pests and diseases.
Attracting predators such as lacewings,
ladybirds and birds can vastly reduce greenfly As with most of us, until recently much of my
numbers, and attracting larger predators, such knowledge about wildlife gardening was
as slow-worms, hedgehogs and frogs, can based on what I’d read in populist books and
help keep numbers of slugs and snails down. magazines, my observations of the many
It’s amazing what you can find in the garden. Photo: Lou Brown
CHAPTER 3 l Wildlife gardening 43
allotments and gardens I’ve found myself in planted the main vegetable beds and planted
over the years, and finally good old fence- and extended the two herb patches to include
leaning advice from other gardeners. The perennials or self-seeders like marjoram and
knowledge passed on from other gardeners sorrel.
was always similar to that in books and
magazines: plant native plants, grow a patch A lot of the work was intuitive but some was
of nettles, keep it scruffy, leave the grass to merely dictated by what I had to hand, what
grow long and dig a pond. was cheap or what was given to me. Eventu-
ally a huge mix of pollinators arrived, along
I’ve since read the brilliant book No Nettles with a family of slow-worms, frogs and many
Required by Ken Thompson, which confirms or tiny visitors I couldn’t even begin to name.
dispels many of the urban myths surrounding
wildlife gardening, including the following.
l ‘Plant native plants.’ This is not necessar- Why my wildlife garden worked
ily true, as non-natives can have longer
flowering times and offer more diversity It seems that through my intuition, improvisa-
for wildlife. tion and generally making the most of what
l ‘Keep a patch of nettles.’ Untrue – nettles was there I stumbled upon many of the
aren’t exactly an endangered species! methods I later read to be successful for
l ‘Build a pond.’ True – any variety of wildlife gardening.
habitat will help attract wildlife.
l ‘Keep it scruffy.’ Only true if it makes for a Inadvertently I took care of the very base of
mixed habitat. any food chain, and everything above it
l ‘Leave the grass to grow long.’ True – long flourished – a ‘look after the pennies and the
grass can be important for overwintering pounds will look after themselves’ approach.
species. The long grass meant there was a place for
overwintering insects, leaving some plants to
I was still going by older pre-Ken-Thompson seed meant small birds had something to eat,
knowledge when I first took on my plot in and of course the pond added an extra habitat.
Bristol. One of the most striking things about
the plot back then was the complete lack of
wildlife, large or small. In fact, with the
exception of brambles and creeping cinque-
foil, there was a decided lack of anything on
the plot.
1
Use string and pegs
to measure the length
and height of the path.
2
Dig out the path, removing all
weeds and weed roots. Dig a deep
trench if you intend to use heavy
material such as stone for the path
surface, but if using brick just dig to
about twice the depth of the brick.
3
Put in edging material if
needed – either plank or brick
(not needed if the path is flush
against raised beds or a
building). Check the level: this
should be straight or tilted away
from buildings at about a 2° angle to
allow for drainage.
4
Fill with hardcore or gravel,
allowing room for the surface
and sub-base layer (the layer
between the path surface and the
base/hardcore layer), and tamp
down with a plank or a tamper,
checking the level as you do so.
CHAPTER 4 l Paths, hedges and fences 63
5
Top with a layer of
sand (or use scalpings
and then sand), tamping
down and checking levels
as you do so. For larger
stones you may choose to
use a dry mortar mix here.
6
Press the stones into the
sand in the pattern you
require, carefully tap them in
place with a soft-headed mallet
or a wood board. Check the
levels of each one and only
move on to the next one when
they are perfectly level.
7
Fill in the gaps with more
sand (or mortar if using),
ensuring the bricks/stones are
tightly in place.
8
If you suffer from a short temper, make up
with everyone you lost your temper with
during the path-laying process – if necessary
cook an evening meal, preferably of humble pie.
PART 2
SPRING
As the slow hand of winter retreats, birds
are busy raising their young, beekeepers
see a rise in hive activity and the self-
employed busy themselves into the new
tax year. And spring is, of course, a very
busy time for the gardener. You have to
keep your eye on the ball in spring – it is
far too easy to miss the short window of
opportunity and fall behind.
Dry method Cut holes in the bottom of a plastic bucket and half-fill it
with comfrey. Place the bucket into another bucket and weigh down the
leaves with stones. A concentrated liquid feed will slowly drip from the
top bucket into the bottom one, and should be watered down by around
8:1 or 10:1. Again, you can also add nettles or other high-nutrient plants.
minerals than others. They can be dug in as a Other common mineral accumulators include
green manure, used as a plant feed or added borage, carrot, cleavers, plantain, chicory,
to the compost heap for extra nourishment. mint, lemon balm, yarrow and strawberry.
They should be used before they go to seed
as their nutrients will be ‘locked’ up in the
seeds to ensure the next generation.
IDENTIFYING NUTRIENT
DEFICIENCIES
The two most commonly used mineral The two charts on the right detail possible
accumulators are comfrey and nettle. A mix of nutrient-deficiency symptoms, the role of
the two will make a very well-balanced feed each mineral and the plants you could apply
suitable for pouring on your tomatoes and as a liquid feed to deal with the deficiencies.
courgettes to encourage fruit. Even added to a
compost heap, many of these mineral Adding plenty of compost and organic matter
accumulators can provide added minerals and should deal with deficiencies in many minor
trace elements to your compost, which in turn nutrients such as copper and zinc. Towards
will be added to your soil to be taken up by the end of the season plants start to naturally
your growing plants and eventually included look a little nutrient deficient – most notably,
in your and your family’s diet. tomatoes will show signs of magnesium
deficiency. Adding a liquid feed may help a
CHAPTER 18 l Feeding plants 159
little but usually it is an indication that the companies spend huge amounts of money
season is coming to an end and the plant has removing nitrogen from the water supply.
given you all the fruit it is capable of that year.
You can ‘harvest’ urine in a good old-fashioned
piss pot or in a plastic bottle with a funnel in
URINE AS FEED the top. Water it down by around 8:1 for leafy
Green leafy crops like a lot of nitrogen, and crops ; 20:1 for non-leafy crops, and use
human urine contains ammonia, which breaks about once a fortnight. Nitrogen aids leaf
down into nitrogen. Once you get over the growth, so this is a good feed for salad leaves
‘yuck’ factor, using urine as a plant feed makes and cabbages. Urine also makes a great
a lot of sense. Farmers spend huge amounts compost activator, breaking down carbon-rich
of money on nitrogen fertilisers and sewage ‘browns’ such as cardboard, sticks and stems.
Major nutrients
HARVESTING
Even though the light intensity has diminished birds but there is no reason why they should
and plant growth begins to slow down at this take all the high-grade fruit and leave you
time of year, there are still plenty of jobs to be with bruised, misshapen and rotten apples!
done as summer gives way to autumn. Long-armed pruners can be useful for taking
Harvesting continues, plant debris are
composted and containers emptied. We also
try to get that little bit extra from our plants
as the main growing season comes to a close.
CONTAINERS FOR
YOUR PRODUCE
How many times have you arrived at your plot
only to find you haven’t got anything to put
your harvested fruit or veggies into? Or how
often have you been out walking and realise
you have no way of harvesting the copious
amounts of fresh, plump blackberries
hanging from the hedgerow?
4 Fold the right-hand corner to the long edge. 7 Fill with produce.
218 GROW YOUR FOOD FOR FREE (WELL, ALMOST)
1
Sheds are best dismantled by at least two l It is further than 2m (6 1/2 ft) from a
people – one to unscrew bolts and the boundary fence (parts of it can be nearer
other (or others) to hold the panels up. but it must be further than 2m at the
highest point).
2
Choose a day when no strong winds have l The centre of the roof and therefore the
3
Take photos of the shed with a digital
camera to refer to when reassembling.
(8ft).
l It takes up a space no bigger than 50 per
4
Remove any glass (if possible) – wrap each house. So no more than half of the garden
pane to protect it in the move. can consist of buildings.
5
Take the roof off first, and try to keep it in
one piece rather than in two. If you do
A quick call to your local planning authority is
a good idea if you are in doubt, and is better
need to take it apart to move it, try to disturb than having to take down a greenhouse
the roofing felt as little as possible. mid-growing season or dismantle a shed.
Always check first if you live in a listed
6
Unbolt one side at a time; use oil or other building or within a national park.
lubricant if the bolts have rusted in place.
Keep the bolts in a safe place.
SHEDS
7
Take everything with you, including the A salvaged second-hand shed or one built
foundation blocks if there are any. from recycled materials will represent a huge
saving to any gardener. What’s more, it will
breathe individuality into the plot and can be
TO REASSEMBLE A SHED ‘made to measure’ for the gardener’s
1
Make sure the area you wish to place your requirements.
shed is completely level.
Salvaged sheds
2
Put down blocks to raise the shed from the
ground.
The vast majority of sheds will be made up of
four side panels, two roof panels and a base/
floor. If you come across a dismantled shed,
3
Work from the base up – again, with at
least two people.
check that all the pieces are there before
taking it away. If not, you may have to
improvise the missing piece or pieces, or try
4
Refer to digital photos of the shed if to make one good shed out of the bits and
necessary. pieces of two.
CHAPTER 31 l Building large structures 219