Allotment Gardening Advice Help Chat
Chatting => Chatting on the Plot => Topic started by: New shoot on March 17, 2024, 20:43
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A plot visit today had this Bee Gees classic playing in my head :lol:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XpqqjU7u5Yc (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XpqqjU7u5Yc)
I went to drop off some bags of green waste for the compost bins and check everything was OK, but any thought of doing anything was quickly scuppered. Actually empty the bags into bins - slurp, slide as I waded over the soil. Get new tree ties onto the pear trees - uurrrmmm, probably going to sink up to my knees if I stand in one spot for longer than a minute. Harvest a bit of chard - probably going to mean more earth than greenery in the bag ::)
We have pretty heavy clay based soil, but it is more like tidal mud flats at the moment. I guess the seed spuds will be staying in the shed for a few weeks yet :tongue2:
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The beds on the lower part of the terrace here, keep getting flooded - I hope the newly planted roses survive :ohmy:
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When I visited the plot I was virtually skiing on a mud path to get to it.
Too wet for serious cultivation I pity the farmers at present.
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We drive daily down the Military Road which is the coastal route along the West Wight. It mainly has fields on either side and we comment about how many 'ponds ' there are now, but all the lower 'furrow' lines are just filled with water. Earlier we had some green shoots starting to appear but they've gone, probably rotted. So I agree about the comment about poor farmers.
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A plot visit today had this Bee Gees classic playing in my head :lol:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XpqqjU7u5Yc (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XpqqjU7u5Yc)
I went to drop off some bags of green waste for the compost bins and check everything was OK, but any thought of doing anything was quickly scuppered. Actually empty the bags into bins - slurp, slide as I waded over the soil. Get new tree ties onto the pear trees - uurrrmmm, probably going to sink up to my knees if I stand in one spot for longer than a minute. Harvest a bit of chard - probably going to mean more earth than greenery in the bag ::)
We have pretty heavy clay based soil, but it is more like tidal mud flats at the moment. I guess the seed spuds will be staying in the shed for a few weeks yet :tongue2:
When I saw your post title, thoughts of that song started even before I read your post! :lol:
Our grass and trees are greening up, the weather is warming, So we aren't having many mud days now.
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Thanks for thinking about that son and the link, I have just spent a happy few minutes watching those boys and their lovely shiny long hair. ah ah. Mrs B
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DEEP :ohmy: :mad:
Looking back at the history on my weather station and we have nearly twice as much rainfall for the first 3 months compared to 2022!
We just a couple of mil away from last years total for the month of April.
We are sandy soil here but the water table is so high its not going anywhere.
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We did a site walk at the weekend, and while we didn't have the same levels of standing water that we had after the Boxing Day 2015 rains and floods, the ground was very squelchy in ways I don't ever remember. How neither of us ended up on our bottoms from the mud on site, I'll never know :lol:
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The bottom few plots on site have been frequently under water over the winter & any heavy rain results in it pooling in ditches most of those ‘owners’ have dug around their plots. Luckily for me I’m higher up tge hill so although my plot has been laggy to say the least it has drained quickly & with doing no dig the heavy mulches I choose to use, help I’m sure.
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Interestingly enough, the plots with the most frequent standing water (which have, quite justifiably, some proper edged beds with channels about 12" deep around them) are at the top of the site.
We understand (from a session with a geophysicist - yes we did use the machine but there was no Tony Robinson around!) that the raised parts of the site are the end of a former glacier (a terminal moraine), and so I think there's a clay cap at the surface level of those higher parts of the site. Plus an underground spring somewhere that comes to the surface about halfway down the 'hill' and makes life extra interesting at times. :unsure: The plot which is most affected by the spring is one where we are not too forceful about the willow ... ::)