Showing posts with label raised beds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label raised beds. Show all posts
Friday, September 18, 2015
Sunday, May 17, 2015
deadlines get work done
House sitting is becoming a bit of a habit. I’ve just completed the second sit, this time with a bit of a menagerie. Three dogs, two cats, chickens and a horse. Just down the road, so have continued to work on my ongoing projects. The dogs were mischevious but very loving, several things got chewed to pieces, including my camera which I stupidly left within reach for a few minutes. (thankfully it still takes photos, but the screen no longer functions and it’s all a bit worse for wear.) It was lovely to be in a house with all mod cons. Light a fire on the cold damp days and watch crappy english TV via satellite. Not something I would normally entertain, but on those odd occasions, just the ticket. I felt guilty if I left the animals alone, in their kennels, for too long, so tended to spend a fair amount of time at the house.
A deadline can work wonders for productivity. I’ve come away to visit friends and then on to England for a few weeks, so have been focussed on getting as much done as possible.
Installing the guttering and getting the water saving system to work.
water butts in the vegetable garden |
straw mulch as a weed suppressant and for water retaining |
Building a table out of reclaimed pallets so that I could have the neighbours for lunch.
ten minute pallet table |
Strimming round the field and mulching all the new hedge plantings with straw.
the hedge line looking great with it's new straw mulch |
Finishing the steps through the hedge.
steps from field to garden |
Planting all my seedling vegetable plants.
Then tidying the whole site to minimise loosing items into the fast growing vegetation which will have grown enormously by my return.
I'm not going to be back till late July, so have my fingers crossed that the weather remains changeable with enough rain to keep the vegetables alive. I hope that with the efforts in mulching and early care, they should be off to a good enough start to survive most eventualities.
Labels:
mulching,
planting,
raised beds,
straw,
vegetables
Tuesday, January 20, 2015
raised beds and clearing
For the most part, the weather has been incredibly kind here for outdoor work. The evenings stay lighter that the UK too, so the days are longer. I can easily be outside till six now, before the light is too poor to carry on.
I attacked the large mound of soil that was left after the drive earthworks. The guys left far more soil than I had anticipated and some is rather poor compared to the rest. The poorer part I have started to spread about to flatten the ground off a bit and just to loose it. The better soil is lovely, the raised beds have had a good fill, along with more leaves and leafmound, gathered from around the village, before a blanket of straw to keep them snug for the winter.
mounded topsoil for new raised bed |
the piles of earth are getting smaller |
clearing the ruin. This is where my new house is going to be |
raised bed complete with salvaged wood sides and leafmould mulch |
As I start to clear the ruin, there is plenty more wood, old beams and the like, which are put directly to work retaining more raised beds. It’d be a shame not to use the good topsoil for another year and I’m going to need plenty of space for sowing seeds if the new seed catalogues have anything to do with it this winter. Long dark evenings are ideal for increasing the workload later in the season, it’s what gardeners dreams are made of. The difficulty is in limiting the varieties that need to be bought, so they all have to be useful in some way. Either for me, or the birds, bees or insects or a combination of all the above.
Labels:
earthworks,
edible forest garden,
garden,
permaculture,
raised beds,
vieuzos
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