Monday, 5 April 2010

New Tool on the Plot




Digging is now well under way. The main veg plot is a roughly equilateral triangle with sides around 45m long, which gives about 900 sq metres for veg and soft fruit. That’s three times the size of my old allotment. This excludes the expanse of more steeply sloping land, which will house the orchard and coppice, and the building plot, which once the house is constructed will give perhaps another 500 square metres of growing space with room for a large polytunnel.

Considering the weather conditions of the last week, the soil is incredibly dry – a virtue of the buffer of Quaternary Fluvioglacial Sand and Gravel that lies over the unforgiving Moinian Metamorphic rocks or Boulder Clay which cover much of the inland area around here. I’d like to think it was judicious foresight, but frankly we’d have taken anything. It’s all a far cry from the Oxford Clay and the main problem is going to be drought, because as Al Lotment knows, Forres gets less rainfall than Oxford, although if he studied the stats properly he could probably show it rains more often here. A brisk southwesterly highlighted the other problem. High up the agenda is a shelterbelt of edible hedging along the north and west boundaries.


As the soil has been cattle-grazed, it has a fertile top over a stony compacted subsoil. Valerie thinks we should get someone in to plough it but that would be like paying someone to dig your manure in for you. Instead, I have invested in a few cutting-edge hand tools. I am pictured with my new best friend, my azada, cutting the first sods. I guess you lot are still struggling on with your quaint anachronistic forks and spades. Paul excepted of course. The azada pulls up Stonehenge style boulders from the subsoil, which inspired me to build a dry-stone wall feature to raise the soil up on the downslope side of the veg plot. It can’t compete with the 9”x 2” but one has to make use of the resources at hand. The pressure is now off with rhubarb in and asparagus ready to go once the soil warms up.

4 comments:

  1. Dallas - Good to see that you haven't lost your report writing skills, i think i have a good understanding of the CSM for your site now!

    Given the site history have your considered further SI in the form of geophysics to find those buried channels that you may need to be abstracting from come the summer drought or a Gore Sorber "PAT" testing programme to look for any residual patches of organic contamination from the previous use that may be presenting a vapour hazard. Both can be exclusively undertaken by ERM in Oxford at a very unreasonable rate.

    Also very impressed with your digging - with the bit you had completed in your photograph compared to your plot size you could be there for a while - get the plough in!

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  2. Thanks for the suggestions Al, and while I value your skills and experience, I will have to go out to tender on this, using your proposal as the project spec.

    There's something therapeutic about digging. Using a plough, I would just be cheating myself.

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  3. Morning all - jetlag so up early. good t see that back-filled trial pit compacted nicely by your side. Im gonna buy one of those Azadas they look good. All five beds now in play down here and manure nicely dug in by numpty so happy. Another bed created by sleeper wall too for soft fruit trees etc so this weekend will be busy. Catch up soon.

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  4. Good to have you back Sarah looking forward to some posts with pictures of your estate soon. Still deciding whether or not to attack my front hedge tomorrow.

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