Life at The Weald - January 2025
and a few distractions
There were wild winds on New Year's Eve so we didn't venture down to the beach with our 12 grapes and bottle of fizz but stayed indoors in the warm and dry, watching the London fireworks on TV!
1 January
New Year's Day was another wet and windy one, not suitable for gardening.
2 January
By contrast, Thursday was a bright, dry but cold sunny day but, as the last day for our New Year visitors, was spent in the warm at home.
3 January
With visitors gone, it was time to see what damage the gales had done. Apart from damage to one of the polycarbonate panels on the half-finished greenhouse, the plot had fared well.
I carried on clearing the area near the raspberries and the adjacent raised bed, where there had been a lot of encroachment of bindweed and couhcgrass (as well as spreading raspberries) and laid down cardboard. I also put some cardboard trays filled with a mixture of leaves and worm compost in the raised bed that had been cleared of raspberries.
The peas and beans planted out a few days earlier had survived the frost.
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3 January - Meteor peas |
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3 January - Broad beans |
4 January
I cleared the middle area next to our eastern boundary with plot 246. There was some bindweed and brambles spreading but it was mostly annual weeds. I will be laying some cardboard soon and spreading some compost and manure and this will be the site for my climbing beans. The northern end of the boundary, by the plum trees is completely engulfed by brambles, couch grass and bindweed as well as several suckers from the plum trees.
We have blackcurrant bushes on our side of the boundary and our neighbour, Louise, had planted some Rosemary on her side,
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4 January - our eastern boundary |
7 January
I continued the job of clearing bindweed and couch grass near the raspberries on the western boundary but also had to dig out raspberry roots that had spread to nearby beds. Some of the spreading raspberries were 2ft deep which makes a mockery of my "no dig"!
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7 January - digging out unwanted raspberries |
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7 January and more digging |
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7 January - and more bindweed roots! |
There was some good news. The elephant garlic and the Meteor peas were surviving the cold bout of weather and afew of the directly sown peas were emerging.
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7 January - Elephant garlic |
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7 January - directly sown Meteor peas |
The real garlic was looking good too.
The weather turned much colder with a slight snowfall in Hove (unlike Scotland, the North and the West country, where there were real blizzards). The snow didn't settle in our garden and not much on the allotment but what did froze with the accompanying sleet and subsequent sub-zero temperature. We are hoping that the sudden cold spell may reduce some of the pests.
The red onions had suffered from the cold but the peas and broad beans seemed OK.
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9 January - the herb wheelbarrow |
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9 January - frozen footpath |
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9 January - rhubarb appearing through the ice |
An allotment colleague, Kate, took this photo of the snow on Hove beach
10 January
Friday was the coldest January night for 15 years. The lowest temperature in the UK was recorded in Scotland at -22.3C, with temperatures of -15C across northern and central England. In Hove the temperature was around -5C.
In the warmth at home, my Oyster King mushroom kit was bearing fruit.
It was a sad day for the allotment. One of the best loved plotholders, Peter Gorbach, had died before Christmas and today was his funeral. I had known Peter before we became fellow allotmenteers through political activities. Born into a Jewish family in America, and experiencing severe anti-semitism growing up and with family members who perished in the holocaust, but he was aware of the great injustice done to the Palestinian people and was a passionate anti-Zionist and fought racism all his life.
The funeral was a secular one at the crematorium up on the Downs. It was a bitterly cold day when I parked in the cemetery for the walk to the Crematorium chapel.
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10 January - Brighton (The Downs) Cemetery |
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10 January - Brighton (The Downs) Cemetery |
16 January
The earliest sown broad beans had suffered some battering from the winds, so I put in some stakes and strings to try to protect them from further buffeting. The later sown ones, which were not so tall, seemed to have fared better.
17 January
I planted out the remaining broad beans that had been sown in pots at home.
19 January
The morning was cold but dry and we had some help from Luke who had volunteered to collect some manure for us - 4 wheelbarrows full! We also brought the chainsaw with us and whilst I was muckspreading and Sylvi was repairing the greenhouse, Luke set to with the chainsaw removing an unwanted plum tree to allow some southern light into the greenhouse.
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19 January - manure spread near Western boundary |
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19 January - manure spread near Eastern boundary |
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19 January - manure spread near potato patch |
20 January
I bought a few Biztro shallots from the shop and planted these. Previously, whilst clearing the bed that had been invaded by raspberries, I discovered some shallots that had been planted last year but had come to nothing and been left in the ground. Rather than chucking them, I separated the bulbs and re-planted these, next to the Biztro, hoping they might produce in a new environment, free of raspberries, bindweed and couchgrass, and which I am determined to keep as weed free as possible!
21 January
I harvested the first of the Oyster King mushrooms - which were delicious.
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21 January - Oyster King mushrooms |
22 January
The garden was looking a bit neglected and I decided to sacrifice some of the lawn to enlarge a flower bed where Sylvi would like to grow Dahlias. I also took the opportunity to lift and divide some of the primulas before replanting and also planted out some Hellebores that had been pot-grown.
The previous few days had seen more strong winds so I visited the plot to see what damage had been done. We had escaped quite lightly! The skylight was missing from the greenhouse, however, but I couldn't find it anywhere.
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25 January - missing skylight |
26 January
There had been more gales overnight but, despite the wind this morning, Sylvi fixed the skylight in the greenhouse. It was miserable weather and we didn't want to stay long but on leaving the plot we discovered there had been a delivery of woodchip, so we braved the weather for a little longer and filled a few sacks which we put in the boot of the car and left.
27 - 28 January
The wind and rain continued.
29 January
It was dry but cold, with a maximum temperature of 5C. I had a meeting on site with someone from Whitehawk Allotment anda representative of Brighton and Hove Food Partnership to discuss the possible siting of a communal food waste compostor at The Weald, which is being considered by the Weald Committee. After the meeting I managed to deposit my woodchip which had been in the car for three days but then retreated as there was more heavy rain that afternoon.
At home there was one more Oyster mushroom to be picked, but the rest had come to little.
It was a dry sunny day, so I took the opportunity of putting some canes and strings around the later sown broad beans, hoping that this might give them some protection from future wnds as they grow taller.
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30 January - Hasselback squash from start..... |
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......to finish |
31 January
The Meteor peas had begun to germinate, almost 25% success so far!
It had been a mixed month. The brief very cold spell was welcome but we had also experienced some unseasonally warm days and very wet weather with strong winds. We are hoping February will be more consistent.
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