Category Archives: Allotments

Pumpkins and squash

Although I shouldn’t complain, since the allotment has been so productive in so many ways, it hasn’t been a brilliant year for pumpkins and squash. But we laid out an entire bed for them for this, our first attempt. Since the plants have now died back, we’ve harvested them.


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The chickens have settled in

I can’t resist doing yet another blog entry about the chickens. We’re very taken with them. Neither could I resist this rather sentimental picture opportunity – the henhouse at the end of the rainbow:


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Amora n’est plus mon amour

I’m very fond of pickled gherkins. In fact, I have to face it, I’m very fond of rather too many foods, but that’s by the by. And the nicest readily available ones that I’ve found are the Amora Cornichons Extra Fins sold in France. English formulations just aren’t the same.

No more. Sorry, Amora, but Jean has grown some cornichons and pickled them. They are simply delectable.
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The chickens have arrived

Well, yesterday the great day arrived, and we went to collect our four Ixworth chickens. I couldn’t take pictures of them yesterday evening, though, since they went straight into the coop on arrival, and have only been let out to explore the run this morning:


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Ready for the chickens, but only just

That was a bit of a close call! The coop and run are ready for the chickens, but only just. Partly because these things always take longer than you think, partly because rain stopped play, and partly because of my own idiocy, it all became a race to the finish.
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Creosoting and foxproofing

The last blog entry on the poultry project took us up to the installation of the basic foundations of the coop and run. The next stage has been to move the hen house onto the site and foxproof the run.

The house has been sitting quietly on the trailer for a month, whilst we’ve been on holiday. I’d forgotten just how heavy most of the panels were. When I loaded up, not only did I have the help of the seller, but we had only a few yards to carry them. Unloading, Jean and I had a long walk from the allotment gates to our plot with each large and clumsy panel.
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Preparing for the chickens

We had the blessing of the local Council to keep chickens on our allotment. Since we returned from hols we’ve been busy first killing the weeds, and then starting to build our new chicken run.

Here’s a snapshot of progress:


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What an allotment year so far!

I posted recently about the wonderful amount of fruit that we’d harvested this year.  Not only is it a bumper year for gooseberries, but all the fruit is prolific and early.


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Coop Jacques

The next project is … keeping chickens.  A few chickens in the back garden will keep us in eggs, and if we take some cockerels as well as pullets, some meat for the freezer.

We’ve sounded out the neighbours, and we can shoehorn a run and coop into our little back garden. So when this came up on eBay, I couldn’t resist it.

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Playing Gooseberry

It’s a bumper year for soft fruit at the allotment.  Our new half allotment has several gooseberry bushes and currant bushes planted under the apple trees.  They’re very difficult to net effectively, and so it’s been a year of feasting for the pigeons, too.  But the fruit cage on the original allotment is pigeon-proof, and we’ve had wonderful crops of gooseberries and raspberries, even though it’s not yet July.

We have four gooseberry bushes in the cage, two Invicta (the classic English goosegog), a Careless (also an old variety) and a red Hinnomaki, which is a sweeter so-called dessert gooseberry, which means that they can be eaten uncooked. The Careless isn’t quite ready yet, but is also loaded with fruit. The red Hinnomaki is pretty well ripe, but although the berries are beautiful, they’re not quite as plentiful as the other ones.

The picture shows the second picking from the two Invicta bushes. Just over 3 kilos, and probably as many again still on the bushes for a third picking next weekend.

All we need is for a return of the hot weather to ripen the tomatoes later in the summer, and our allotment joy will be complete!