Monday, October 10, 2022

DONE!

 19th August 2021, Terrace is completed…


Finally the Terrace is complete. A major milestone in the history of the “Haven”. This is pretty much 11 months into taking on the allotment, and just over 10 months since we put the first spades into the ground.


The terrace is far from how we want it to look, but we are proud that from a flat bit of ground we now have created a working allotment, and a space to sit and enjoy the “Haven” and effectively a destination from which we can observe, plan, socialise, and rest.


Time will tell how robust the whole structure is, and whether it can resist the various seasons that the weather inevitably throws at us, but Desi will be coating the wood with protective layers annually (and tomorrow) to ensure that what we have created serves us for a long time to come.


The red bricks are now all installed and, to be honest, with minor discrepancies, the whole project has turned out just how we would have liked. 


Of course it is a little empty right now, so the next actions are to create a table and find some chairs from somewhere so that we can actually use the terrace as it was intended. There is no rest for the wicked!


The final picture shows that we have a water pipe in the wrong place. We are going to seek to move this one. The pipes have been planned, so we just need to ensure that these things are addressed the far side of winter.


As for now we have enough time left this year to put the terrace to early use. Maybe it will be able to serve us until the end of October after which we’ll probably shut up shop until the spring of 2022. There is enough work to keep us going for sure, and the Xmas festivities and New Year celebrations too. Although it is embarrassingly early to talk about those now.








Passiflora Blooms

 18th August 2021, Passiflora blooms and Terrace reaching final stages


Isn’t nature stunning? Take a look at these pictures of the flower of the Passiflora. There are many different varieties of Passiflora but this has definitely one of the most delightful flowers. This is the first year of our Passiflora and we only planted a few weeks ago, so we are very happy to see the plant rewarding us with these blooms and showing us the appreciation of where we have located it.




The bees love this plant too, multiple bees crowd on to each flower during the sun. Maybe the scent of the flower is stronger when it's warm.


The Terrace is nearing completion! Now onto the decking.


You will notice that the red bricks (with holes in) have been sited in position now, and the installation of the decking has got under way. This picture was taken late in the day, close to 8pm and so that is all for today: the job will be completed tomorrow. The decking has been coated with a weather proofing paint before being screwed down. But there will be another coat when the “laying” task is complete. The raised bed wall with be treated too, at the same time.

 

Mid August Disease

 15th August 2021, Blight bites and construction moves on


The first two pictures show a very depressing picture to tomato growers everywhere. This is what tomato (and potato) blight looks like. It is a wind borne fungus that affects this variety of plants and it is highly infectious! Once it arrives, there is precious little you can do except take off unaffected tomatoes and burn the vines / leaves. 




In our case, we managed to harvest a bountiful amount of green tomatoes but at this stage very few had turned red. We managed to get some ripe ones in the polytunnel but they were not the most bountiful crop, as explained in a previous post. 


The wet rainy July and beginning of August really did the damage. Not particularly cold but wet and windy, ideal conditions for the spread of the disease and on an open allotment, with plenty of people growing tomatoes, within 1 week everyone had it… Maybe next year blight-resistant varieties will be on the cards. Relish and pickles aplenty for xmas presents I think.


With all four pallets now installed for the terrace, time to add the actual retaining wall for the raised beds. The installation requires the soil to be moved out of the way so that Chris can get the power tool behind the screws and as it is quite long, this is quite a bit of work, but finally, as you can see, starting to look quite nice and tidy.



With the wall complete you can see how the finished raised bed looks and no sooner was it complete, the full complement of soil and flowers planted. Still plenty of work to be done, next step is to install the decorative brick (term, loosely used, decorative) and to finish off with the decking boards.



Notice the potatoes all cut back now - the blight got them too - so off to the fire with the foliage! Hopefully the potatoes underground were not affected, and we got the disease contained soon enough.



Now we have a little bit of a race against time. The polytunnel needs to have raised beds built around it to secure it for the winter and we are now fast approaching September. At some point the number of dry days where we can put in a full day's work are going to reduce, the days get much shorter and therefore time available becomes a more scarce commodity. Time for a big push! We don’t want to be picking up the pieces of the polytunnel again next year!!





Construction, Food, Compost, Blight, and Sunsets

 13th August 2021, Construction, Food, Compost, Blight, and Sunsets


The raised bed wall is up (well, almost). You can see what it will look like. The last few planks need to be screwed onto the retaining posts but we are pretty much there now. You can also see a couple of bricks in front of the pallets which is how the row of bricks will be positioned to (kind of) finish off the underneath of the decking from the front perspective. All finally coming together. Hasn’t really taken that long, but full days (as far as we could) with the showers and wet weather.



The next picture is a look from the other side. You can more clearly see that the raised wall nearest the tap has yet to be affixed but we’re quite pleased with how it is looking now. Can’t wait to get the decking down which has been purchased (occupying the length of Desi's house) but we need a full day to get it all in position, cut as necessary and then screwed into place.



Meanwhile in other parts of the allotment:


The compost bins are looking nice and tidy. Desi has nailed some white plastic around the bins. This is an attempt to manage the heat conditioned inside the compost. The bacteria works best when it is warm and so the addition of the white sheet helps to keep the compost warmer.



The fire is in full use today too. Unfortunately, blight has hit both the potatoes and the tomatoes. The foliage and stems have been cut and now we are burning them. The jury is out on whether the infected leaves etc. can be composted, but for safety we are burning them. The ashes can then be scattered onto the soil.



The weather is probably the culprit for the blight. There was just too much rain, not enough sun and maybe even not really warm enough. One of the problems with having an allotment where you grow tomatoes / potatoes is that once one of the plots gets it, then it quickly spreads throughout the local area. Everyone has had blight this year! Maybe we will investigate blight-resistant crops, as in our particular circumstance, on this allotment it looks like we need those. We’ll see what happens next year, if blight returns then we’ll do this. Chris says he can’t remember his father having blight in all the years he grew tomatoes, but then again, Chris wasn't too interested then, he might just not have noticed.


And here is a beautiful August Sunset to end the day.




Herbs too

 10th August 2021, Herbs Too


The construction work continues. As you can see the final pallet has now been installed. We now have a terrace albeit with gaps. The terrace length is a full 3.2m. The other part of the dry wall is now also constructed. And the space occupied by the white pot has been left for the potential of a small pond in due course. 


We have also planted some herbs into the space this side of the trellis close to the passiflora. They are four types of mint (that's how many Desi bought online for now) also some oregano and chives.


Next steps for the terrace is the raised bed wall so that we can populate with soil, finish off with the decking so that we can sit more comfortably and then a table and bench seat to create.





August Rainbows

 6th August 2021, Food, Construction and Weather


The Runner beans are doing amazing things. We already have had many kg’s of them but the plants have so many more flowers! Looks like a freezer-full of these this year, although they can be cooked into stir fries, fritters, relish and many other delicious recipes.



What is going on with the tomatoes in the polytunnel? They have struggled to get going this year. The pollination seems to have not been very efficient, maybe to do with the door being closed while we are not there. This will have kept pollinators out for chunks of the day, also when the sun is out it gets very hot in there - we do need a window or something to enable the heat to “get out” and pollinators in…



So apart from a lack of fruiting, these plants have had extra thick stems and these strange growth type things appearing. On closer inspection these are tiny roots, as if the plant wants to throw out some additional roots into the soil… (Never really seen these before!) We have had enough tomatoes so far to just eat them with our picnic at the “Haven”, the rest are very slow to ripen thus far, and now this blight may have arrived for them too.



This is what we have been dealing with this summer: lots of heavy rain showers and then some sun, great for rainbows!  The sun, however, has not been enough to really ripen the tomatoes and the moist humid air has been quite enough to bring whatever mold spores thrive in such conditions. Very frustrating on the growth front but also stopping play on the construction front too!



Construction does continue though. Another two pallets down; just the one to go. Chris, the main designer/contractor/builder/project manager, thinks there will need to be some levelling up of the pallets, although they look pretty flat to me, Desi, the impatient one. The purpose of the sand is to get things just how Chris (and I) want them, but lifting pallets up and down is heavy work - beats the gym manifold!



Nice rainbow scene on the construction site. We are so pleased for the polytunnel providing a dry space to retreat to when the heavens open, so at least we can work between these all too frequent shower bouts.





A New Seating Style Emerges

 4th August 2021, A new seating style emerges


We have arrived!!  The first chance to use the terrace albeit in an incomplete state… but now at least the chairs do not sink into the ground and we are sitting in the same place that we will be when the finished article is unveiled.



More produce is also beginning to come in. 5 courgettes, broccoli, kale, cabbages, chard and runner beans in this picture. The hard work of all the digging, weeding and preparing the ground over the past 10 months or so, finally showing results and jolly tasty it all is too!



The “Haven” is taking shape now… This year has been a full-on year:

Finishing off all the digging and preparing the soil for where we were going to plant;

Erection of the polytunnel (and rebuilding after May when it almost blew away);

Creation of the compost bins and area to work in next door to compost bins;

And now the terrace is beginning to take shape…

Plus planting, managing and taking care of all the different veggies we are growing this year -it is starting to be a full time job!



From this different view of the terrace you can now see that we are adding sand on top of the ballast to enable us to get a level surface to screw the decking onto. So far so good, but another three pallets to align and level- it might be a long day!



The cabbages are doing really well, so are the runner beans. It is a shame that the slugs like the cabbages as much as we do. Fortunately, the runner beans appear not to be bothered too much (a bit of black fly attack in the early stages by now nothing much is bothering them) so they are very prolific! Looking for things to do with courgettes and runner beans, innovation rife in the kitchen… 



However, all is not rosy everywhere… Check out the tomatoes! We believe this is blight beginning to make its presence known :( The weather has been particularly damp and humid, ideal conditions for blight and it seems that it is sweeping across the allotments. Once it appears, it spreads like wildfire, and as the story goes, it has only taken a week to get everywhere. And as potatoes are in the same family as tomatoes, looks like it has probably spread to them as well, or vice versa. (Desi's dad in Bulgaria refers to this fungal, air-born bacteria as "potato blight".) 



The final picture here is a different angle of the terrace construction on this day. Some plants are already in the raised bed. We can’t go overboard planting out there as yet because there will still be disruption as the raised bed needs to be screwed onto the pallets. So, still a lot of work to do!





Wednesday, October 5, 2022

Not too small, not too big...

 1st August 2021, Defining the end of the Terrace


Having now defined the base of the terrace and the raised bed around the side, the time has come to make the statement as to where the terrace ends.


There was some deliberation about how long the terrace would be. We tussled with the dimensions, as it needed to be big enough to be able to sit with comfort, and yet not too big that it was disproportionate to the size of the allotment. We ended up with a terrace size that was 3.4m which was coincidentally just over the length of the decking we wanted. So that worked together nicely. Plus 9 x 14cm (width of the decking planks) came out to 126cm (when placed side to side), and the actual width of the terrace was 120cm plus a brick, allowing for some discrepancy down the 3.4m of terrace we had an allowance of some 2-3cm of overhang, which worked out again just right!


On the allotment we are not allowed to use cement as no structures are supposed to be permanent. We used a little cement to hold the pallet in position, but mostly it was supported by stones and debris that we had dug up from the plot.



The next step with the terrace was to place a layer of small stone ballast on top of the rubbish which then filled up all the holes and allowed us to create a flatter surface. Desi was clearing the stones here from the remaining part of the plot (with the exception of paths) that was yet to be dug. This was so the other dry brick wall could be built to finish off this side of the raised bed. 


Puddles and Pools

 31st July 2021, Rain tries to stop play, but we work around it


Fortunately we have long days at the moment because the weather is making the whole allotment experience a bit of a stop / start affair. As you can see the rain has been pouring down and the nature of the road close by and the drainage has meant that we are working in a puddle (small pond).


The job is to get the side wall all installed so that we can begin to fill in the space vacated by the soil and begin to build the terrace, now all the “digging out” is completed.



One of the big issues we’ve got here with the allotment is these puddles on the road. What we are doing is actually providing an easier escape route for the water by digging out this soil, so we must make sure that the drainage under the terrace and elsewhere on the plot is able to distribute the water easily.



As you can see here the area of the terrace is flooded, the rain has stopped. Here we are looking across the compost bins, over the piles of pallets (for future use) and this big mountain of earth which we have dug out of the terrace area. We are sure we will find a use for all this displaced soil in time, but we are moving soil around the plot from pillar to post.



The wood surround is installed. This is not the raised bed wood, only the wood being used to support the base of the terrace. So the first layer is wood just so that the plastic is somewhat protected from what comes next - basically rubbish we have recovered from the plot and adjacent plots. So that is the first step… 


 

Finally we add in the rubbish to fill up the space and also plenty of stones harvested from the digging out process of this terrace and other digging around the allotment… all in all a reasonable amount of rubbish taken out of circulation and put to a good use.



Quite pleased with the day’s work amongst all the rain, this sees in the end of July… tomorrow another month begins and the work continues on! 


Wet Summer 2021

 30th July 2021, The digging is mostly done (for now), weather continues


The weather hasn’t been playing ball too much of late, so we are having to dodge the rains. The first picture is the last spade of soil to be excavated from the terrace ditch. This was all dug by eye as opposed to trying to level the base all out. The thing is, nothing is level, so everything is just at a different height. Best thing to do, Chris decided, is work on the basis that it is approximately correct and then when we are filling in the hole we level things up before we put the decking on. 


We believe this is our very first Passiflora flower. Chris says his mother used to have this in her garden and he loved the flower, how very exquisite it is. Who but nature could engineer such a thing of beauty as this! Not only that, but totally functional and works in every way. 



A view across the allotments. This is what we have been contending with pretty much for the whole of the summer. And we wonder why the tomatoes and potatoes are complaining… stop / start rain! Great for slugs and ducks, not so good for ripe tomatoes!



Pretty impressive cloud formations though… you have to hand it to nature, its got everything covered, from flowers, vegetables, rain, sun and of course wind.


Monday, October 3, 2022

10 months and still pushing on

 29th July 2021, 10 months into the project almost and still pushing on


We have had the allotment over 10 months now and so much has happened, but as soon as things get done, new ideas spring to mind to take things onto a different level.


These top bits of ground by the path appear to house plenty of rubble as you can see by the big pile of bricks, stones, and the like. Makes digging tricky and laborious but that’s the interesting thing about allotments, you never know what you might find under there.


Once the pile of earth is out the next step is to finish the side wall and to build a dry brick wall for the other side. (Still some way before doing that though!)



The next picture you can see a small mound of soil along with the egg shells (good for calcium in the soil). Here we are beginning to tip the surplus soil from the construction as well as the growing mound by the side of the polytunnel. Not much soil to go now thankfully or we would genuinely have nowhere to put it.



Tomatoes are filling up the polytunnel as well, although to be honest, there isn’t a lot of fruit on them. Seems like they have been producing mainly foliage and flowers that don’t get pollinated. Hopefully they will pick up as we can only see one or two tomatoes in there.



The outside tomatoes are faring better, although they have a different type of issue. The leaves are disfigured and curving. It's definitely not lack of water, as this certainly hasn’t been the case, could be some disease or other, we are getting a feeling it must be something.

Round the back of the tomatoes the butternut squashes are beginning to take over the lower patch of ground. I have a suspicion that August and September might see a flurry of fruits being created, well we can always hope…



As the terrace area is constructed we are locating our seats wherever we can. This piece of ground in the excavation is quite stable, although the metal feet of the chairs have a tendency to sink into the mud! Can’t wait until we have the seating area all set up and we can rest in comfort overlooking the rest of the “Haven”.







December 2023

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