Sandgate Community Garden: Update 1 December 2019

This was a week of absolute contrast.  On Wednesday it was lashing down with rain, but troops turned out for the morning session and we planted most of the hedge until soaked through to the skin and covered in mud; such dedication.  Not only were we there, but so was Paul the Saga Head gardener, putting up the new fence alongside the site of the pond.  The fence is a requirement as the pond is in a public place, and we are very grateful to Paul and Saga for it, and very smart it looks too.

On Saturday we managed to finish the rest of the hedge in glorious sunshine, and even got the posts for the windbreak in place, with a little time left to collect more leaves to set out some new pathways from a gateway entrance, to the compost heap.  As soon as we turn up at the garden to do something, the resident robin makes itself heard, following our every move and making a dash for anything edible that gets unearthed.  It sits on the wall or in the trees and bushes and sings its heart out.

This week the garlic and the broad beans have started to show through the ground, the pea shoots grow longer and start to unfurl. We pulled a couple of leeks for the first time, just to see how they are doing.  There are not many of them this year, but this time next year……..

Apart from our usual sessions on Wednesday and Saturday mornings, there are always other things to be done.  Some of us went to the Hythe hops meeting to find out about this great community project.  We have bought four hop plants which will arrive sometime in March, and paid £5 for our yearly subscription to the scheme.  This is the second year for the Hythe hops, which now has over a hundred members, from New Romney to Folkestone, all growing just one or two hop plants in their garden or allotment in order to share the harvest and then later the beer after a couple of microbreweries have done their magic.  So we are dreaming of supping our own beer at our garden picnic next year!

What’s next?

  • Paint the bird boxes
  • Put up the windbreak mesh
  • Continue to put down the paths
  • Spot hoe identifiable weeds
  • Make a start on the pond!!
Posted by Tim Prater in Sandgate Community Garden

Sandgate Community Garden: Update 24 November 2019

We are on standby waiting for the raspberry plants to arrive.  The hedge plants arrived Saturday afternoon, they will need planting this week.  The weeds are still growing, and so we are still weeding!  The leaves continue to fall, and we continue to collect them!  When the nursery children came along this week to bring their compost, we had a good look at how the leaf compost was doing.  Just under the surface, steam can be seen rising from the pile, and it is almost hot to the touch, great for warming up cold hands! 

So many people came by the garden on Wednesday morning to say hello, I think we spent most of the time chatting, which is great!  More and more are bringing their veg peelings for our compost bins which is a good thing, and we ask that it goes in any of the plastic bins, not the wooden ones.

We are on the lookout for any pieces of spare marine plywood, minimum 60cm square so that Eddie can repair the herb boxes that are currently in a sad state.  Please get in touch via this address if you can source some.

On Saturday we planted the two Heritage apple trees bought at Brogdale in October.  Freddie kindly bought the trees for the garden, and came along with her sister, to help plant them.  The trees are in memory of their mother, and all the apple pies she used to make for picnics on the beach.  Let us hope we can carry on the tradition.

On Sunday, some of us are off to a hop growing course…… more about that next week!

What’s next?

  • Get the hedge plants in ASAP!
  • Begin to put in the wind shelter posts.
  • General weeding of identifiable weeds
  • Paint the bird boxes
  • Collect leaves
Posted by Tim Prater in Sandgate Community Garden

Sandgate Community Garden: Update 17 November 2019

We are ready for the hedge plants to arrive, as soon as they come, they can be planted.  The pea shoots are starting to appear, and are now under some fleece protection.  Luckily the birds have so far not bothered with the newly planted onion and garlic so once they establish some roots we will not have to worry about them being dislodged from place.  We even have a rose in flower.  It seems incredible how things will still grow at this time of year.  We have plenty of winter salad leaves, but not many people feel like eating salad when the weather is colder! 

The broad beans the nursery children planted are now showing well above the soil, and they have been visited, probably by a fox, that has been digging looking for worms to eat.   They have had to protect the area with a criss cross of strings and sticks.

Worms in the soil are an indication of the good health of the soil.  We have noticed more worms since the wetter weather, and having added compost.  Stinging nettles also show rich soil, and we seem to have plenty of them springing up!  Many people have commented that the vegetables grown on the plot have such a rich flavour, and this is due to the fact that that they are far more nutritious than commercially grown food on an intensive farm system.  After the war, as farms became larger, using herbicides and pesticides, and depleting the soil; the fruit and vegetables produced are becoming poorer in nutritional value, so today we would have to eat six times the amount of fruit and veg to get the same amount of vitamins and minerals that our ancestors had.  Unless of course you are lucky enough to be able to buy or grow organic……. food for thought.

Posted by Tim Prater in Sandgate Community Garden