What do you do with the allotment over winter?

Started by Digitalis, March 22, 2009, 18:29:48

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Digitalis

Do you grow much, or is it just soil prep'?


Digitalis


Tee Gee

Outside over the winter months I will have such things as;

Winter Cabbage, Spring Cabbage, Savoys, Sprouts, Leeks, Parsnips, Garlic, Japanese Onions and sometimes sprouting broccoli on the go.

I don't bother growing stuff in my greenhouse I find it too much hassle, plus the fact this is my hibernation period.

tonybloke

Quote from: Cosmo and Dibs on March 22, 2009, 18:29:48
Do you grow much, or is it just soil prep'?
plant overwintering onions, garlic.
grow.. all of the brassica's (cabbage, cauli, sprouts, broccolli, kale) leeks, parsnips, carrots.
grow green manures (saves soil erosion)
prep a bit of ground, repair any structures, turn the compost heap, collect rainwater,.......
NAH,  Not much going on overwinter on an alotment!! ;)
You couldn't make it up!

Robert_Brenchley

I have a few things in - permanent crops like rhubarb, plus overwintering onions, garlic, sometimes broad beans. It tends to get waterlogged at that time of year so it's not an ideal environment and there are quite a lot of flowers, lilies for instance, that I can't grow in the open ground.

trickydiggy

collect and spread poo to cover weeds/grass and rot down to make ground easier to dig in march
TD

STEVEB

If it ain't broke don't fix it !!

cambourne7

I try and turn over the soil which is heavy clay to let the frost break it down.

I do plant over winter thngs like garlic but the sites so exposed nothing else really works.

kt.

Quote from: Cosmo and Dibs on March 22, 2009, 18:29:48Do you grow much, or is it just soil prep'?

Most of the stuff I do has already been said.  Not just soil prep,  but also, if required,  re-plan and add in any alterations to what I intend to be growing after winter and where I will be planting new stuff.  You should also look at cleaning your greenhouse,  pruning fruit trees and bushes in late autumn or early spring. 
All you do and all you see is all your life will ever be

Eristic

I aim to harvest crops every month of the year and plant crops every month of the year. Land that becomes free has to be dug or forked prior to resowing and there is always some weeding to do. Between tasks there is compost bags to turn, manure to collect, old flowerpots to empty, new peasticks to requisition, and all has to be done before darkness. Winter is a busy period for me.

hopalong

This winter I grew overwintering onions, garlic, aquadulce broad beans and butterhead lettuce (under a cloche).  Also sowed some green manures - field beans and winter tares.  Continued to harvest brussels sprouts, cabbages, kale, leeks, parsnips and perpetual spinach.
Keep Calm and Carry On

elvis2003

wintertime we get frustrated due to the lack of daylight,there is always something to do it seems,last winter  the husband was busy putting up the new shed,whilst i was digging it all over ready for  a nap.tried some overwintering cabbage and kale,still looking good,got onion sets in,generally tidyed up,maintanence jobs etc.looked after the compost,put up bird boxes,general pottering around really.this year we will def be looking on collecting manure,plant more overwintering things,and absolutely get dug over by november,once its done its done hey.well,thats the idea,wether we do or not.......
when the going gets tough,the tough go digging

Robert_Brenchley

I normally get on with some digging, but this winter I almost abandoned the plot for several weeks due to low temperatures. The result is that I'm now way behind where I hoped to be.

elvis2003

Quote from: Robert_Brenchley on March 22, 2009, 23:28:50
I normally get on with some digging, but this winter I almost abandoned the plot for several weeks due to low temperatures. The result is that I'm now way behind where I hoped to be.
robert,im sure you are not as behind as you feel you are,youll soon catch up
when the going gets tough,the tough go digging

1066

Go on holiday!! after all the work on the plot I deserve it   ;)

PurpleHeather

We find winter is the best time to take a holiday or three. No kids to worry about schooling any more. It is rather long haul to find decent sun and resorts but it suits us.

We grow winter vegetables and the lottie, it has some food in 12 months of the year.  parsnips and swedes for roots, leeks, savoy, brussels, kale. Then PSB and spring cabbage for later.

I keep my herbs in large pots outside in summer and most of these will over winter in the unheated green house with nothing more than a weekly watering. I have not found the knack of growing potatoes and lettuce there but have another cunning plan to try out this winter.

The surplus fruits beans, cauliflower and so on in the freezer with jams, chutney and pickle could probably make us totally self sufficient if we put the effort into it.

Most people finish sorting out the allotment from Summer in October and
start off a few seeds, onions and garlic either at home or in the cold frame or greenhouse on the plot in January. That is only 8 weeks off altogether and there is Christmas to attend to.

We need a holiday too.





flowerofshona2007

We do all the digging, put manure on the plotect.
We have leeks, parsnips, loads of brassicas, onions, shallots.
We are up the lottie most weeks through the winter.

lewic

I fixed my leaking shed, spent far too much money in garden centres, and took tons of rubbish to the tip.

What I should have done is less shopping and more digging!

manicscousers

collected leaves for a leaf bin as well as all the above, we have hens so someone has to clean them out and feed so, most days, even if only for half an hour, we're up there , plus, there's always something to harvest, we grow chinese leaves etc in the poly ;D

Adrianw

Planted Italian Rye Grass as a green manure.
Forgot how much hard work it was digging it in.

Repaired leaky shed, fixed fence, remade pathways.
Sat with a flask of coffee watching the world go
Don't do anything that you wouldn't want to be caught doing

saddad

I gave up rye grass for the same reason... tares and phacalia much easier...  :)

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