Thursday, 4 March 2021

Grow At Home Project

Sowing Tomatoes at Home

Dig In is closed to volunteers at the moment, so we've delivered seed kits and people are growing at home. Here's how to sow tomatoes at home.

Tomatoes can be sown in late February to April, they need a temperature of 15-20 °C. Tomato seeds are very forgiving, they will grow in any shape of container - square pots, round pots, a mushroom tray or a tetrapak with holes in (and a tray underneath so water doesn’t leak!)


Cut out a rectangle on one side, leaving an edge so the sides don't splay out.

Then use a skewer to make holes in the bottom. 

 

Fill with compost up to about 1.5cm from the top. Give the tray or pot a little shake and tap it on the table to settle the compost and make sure it is flat.

Shake the seeds out of the packet onto your hand or a piece of paper and sow them thinly - for the tetrapak there are 6. That’s the densest you should really sow tomato seeds, any more and the roots get tangled too much. Make sure they are spread out over the whole surface. 

Sprinkle a thin layer of compost on top of the seeds, about 0.5-1cm. 

Pop it in a tray and onto the windowsill, water it by pouring water into the tray, not on the surface of the compost (this might dislodge the seeds).

...and a plastic bag helps keep the poisture in. Make sure you label it with the date - you should see seedlings in a week or two.

Monday, 15 February 2021

Still chilly...

The now thawed, it rained, then it got cold again! It was a very very chilly morning at Dig In when Karen went to check how things were on 13th February. 

 Everything OK in the polytunnel, even though it had gone down to minus 5.5 degrees C! 

 

Lots of footprints in the snow. 

 

The floating glass ball had got frozen in, so Karen pushed it out so now there's some clear water for birds to drink from. 

 

The black plastic Karen put down a couple of weeks ago has stayed put. 

 

And the garlic has certainly got the cold snap it needs to grow well!

Wednesday, 3 February 2021

Dig In - in the snow!

 Kath took some lovely photos last week of Dig In in the snow. So here's a few of them! Can you guess what's under the snow?









Waging War against Weeds

Maybe that is a little too militaristic! After all some weeds are pretty, some are useful, and many aren't too much of a problem. And what is the difference between a weed and a wildflower? Not much! However, Dig In does have a bit of a perennial weed problem, something inherited from before Dig In began, when those allotment plots were unused for many years. Perennial weeds are ones which go on for years and years, often with long roots underground - many of us remember them! 

Here's Karen digging couch grass weeds last April

As well as digging out, there are other ways of keeping down weeds like this. One is to shade them out with mulch. A mulch is anything laid  on the soil surface, from a layer of compost to landscape fabric with woodchippings on top, they are all mulch. We've used newspapers and woodchip to reduce the couch grass round the herbs and raspberries at Dig In. This slowly decomposes and feeds the soil too, and is an environmental option. However it is best used on perennial crops, so a different approach is needed on the Sunray Beds where we grow annual vegetables.

Here there's newspaper mulch round redcurrants, covered by hay

 For years we have used black plastic sheeting to keep out the light through the winter months. This isn't a common technique, usually landscape fabric which lets water through is a better option for healthy soil. But Dig In gets very wet in the winter, being at the bottom of the hill, the water drains down. Some years the lawn is like a pond! So the soil stays healthy under the plastic, and the weeds are reduced. Plastic degrades over time, and after about 10 years use we needed to replace the plastic sheets. We found some made of recycled plastic to be less un-environmental, and last week Karen went to collect it, helped - at a distance - by Kath. Then was the fun of laying it out and cutting to size! 




Eventually all but one unplanted bed covered - hopefully massively reducing the weeding time spent by volunteers!

[Whilst Dig In is closed during lockdown, Karen and a skeleton crew are keeping an eye on things ready for volunteers to come back]


Wednesday, 27 January 2021

January Update

Due to the current lockdown, Dig In will not be running volunteer sessions for the next few weeks. We will keep in touch and let you know when we are able to start sessions again.
We'd like to thank all our volunteers for the sterling work you have done in keeping safe and cheerful over the last 5 months since we started back again. We hope to see you all soon, and keep well!
Here's some photos from January.
 
We managed one volunteer session in January before lockdown! We tackled brambles...

And cleaned the outside of the polytunnel to let light in

Karen brought in some plants for the polytunnel.
 
Look at those roots!

Garlic doing well - it needs the cold of winter.

Kale and purple sprouting brocolli

Pulp Friction soft fruit cage

The Community Orchard - looking good in its first winter

Mizuna flourishing in the polytunnel

Apples boxed up and ready to take to the Stapleford Food Project

Seeds all ready to go for spring!