Bothwell Community Garden
News, information and advice for members and friends of Bothwell Community Garden.
Contact us and contribute!
Contact us and contribute! We want your ideas, photos, recipes, gardening advice and tips to give this blog a real community feel, so please don't be shy about getting involved.
Please contact us by email at bothwellcommgarden@yahoo.com or grab a committee member for a chat!
Please contact us by email at bothwellcommgarden@yahoo.com or grab a committee member for a chat!
Tuesday, 26 April 2011
Are your crops happy bed-fellows?
Did you have resounding success last year with certain crops without doing anything 'special'? Did others fail, but you didn't know why?
Companion planting could be the answer. Plants have always lived side by side; and sometimes they have benefited from this partnership. Sometimes it hasn't worked out quite so well.
Companion planting involves growing a combination of plants that are of mutual benefit. Some have obvious benefits - growing carrots next to members of the allium family (onions, leeks, garlic etc) confuses and deters both the onion and the carrot root fly because the plants are so strongly scented. Herbs also have their uses - tarragon repels pests and is said to improve the flavour of most vegetables.
Here is a brief guide to companion planting - wherever possible, 'bad matches' should be planted as far away from each other as is feasible within your raised bed.
Beans
Love: Squash, sweetcorn, cucumbers, potatoes (dwarf beans only), celery, rosemary, sage, tarragon
Hate: Onions, leeks, garlic, chives
Broccoli / Calabrese
Love: Chamomile, peppermint*, dill, sage, rosemary, chives, tarragon
Hate: Strawberries, tomatoes, climbing beans
Cabbages / Kale
Love: Celery, onions, mint*, nasturtiums, dill, rosemary, oregano, chives, chamomile, sage, thyme
Hate: Strawberries, tomatoes, climbing beans
Carrots
Love: Lettuces, radishes, onions, tomatoes, garlic, leeks, chives, sage, tarragon
Hate: Dill
Cucumbers
Love: Sweetcorn, beans, garlic, nasturtiums, oregano, chamomile, tarragon
Hate: Sage
Fennel
Love: Tarragon
Hate: Coriander
Garlic
Love: Carrots, onions, tomatoes, tarragon
Hate: Beans
Onions, Leeks, Spring Onions
Love: Tomatoes, carrots, chamomile, tarragon
Hate: Beans
Peas
Love: Beans, carrots, celery, chicory, sweetcorn, cucumbers, peppers, potatoes, radishes, spinach, turnips, parsley, rosemary, tarragon
Hate: Onions, chives, garlic, leeks
Peppers
Love: Basil, oregano, tarragon, peas
Potatoes
Love: Dwarf beans, brassicas, coriander, oregano
Hate: Rosemary, tomatoes
Pumpkins and Squash
Love: Sweetcorn, beans, cucumbers, oregano, tarragon
Hate: Sage
Radishes
Love: Peas, cucumbers, tarragon
Tomatoes
Love: Onions, basil, mint, parsley, petunias, French marigolds, chives, oregano
Hate: Potatoes, sweetcorn, kohlrabi, dill
*If you are growing mint, please grow it in a submerged pot in your bed, unless you fancy a raised bed full of rampant mint!
Sources:
Alys Fowler, The Edible Garden (BBC Books)
Dave and Andy Hamilton, The Self Sufficient-ish Bible (Hodder and Stoughton)
Brenda Little, Companion Planting (New Holland)
Saturday, 23 April 2011
Seedlings are available.....
Yes, our wonderful polytunnel group have been working their fingers to the bone to provide us all with fantastic, very cheap seedlings which are now fully hardened-off and ready for planting in beds.
There's something for every gardener, from chicory to chard, cabbage to coriander.
Suggested donations are:
25p per individual plant in pot
50p per three-in-a-pot
Plants are available on Wednesdays and Sundays between 2 and 3pm; or you can pay a member of the polytunnel group or the committee if you see us - we're often around!
There's something for every gardener, from chicory to chard, cabbage to coriander.
Suggested donations are:
25p per individual plant in pot
50p per three-in-a-pot
Plants are available on Wednesdays and Sundays between 2 and 3pm; or you can pay a member of the polytunnel group or the committee if you see us - we're often around!
Friday, 8 April 2011
Bored children this Spring Break?
Many thanks to Ann Scott for emailing us details of this brilliant website from The Woodland Trust aimed at children of all ages:
http://www.naturedetectives.org.uk/
Eagle-eyed youngsters will notice a myriad of changes in the garden now that Spring has finally arrived. The trees are becoming green, seedlings are starting to emerge (come and see my turnip seedlings in bed B9, under the plastic, if you've nothing in your own bed at the moment), there are mini-beasts everywhere and there is frog-spawn in the bog garden pond! So come along and spot things that grow, things that creep, things that wiggle and things that fly! Don't forget you can record your detective work in the folder in the potting shed too!
Woodland Trust Nature Detectives
Your garden needs YOU this Sunday!
We will be planting our soft fruit area on Sunday 10th April at 2 pm and need as many volunteers as possible, please!
There is a brilliant selection of fruit to be planted up: raspberries (110), blackcurrants (10), redcurrants (6), a couple of blackerries, tayberry and a loganberry.
Please wear wellies or sturdy footwear and gloves - there are gloves available in the tool shed if you don't have your own.
Refreshments (and maybe even a biscuit!) will be provided! Look forward to seeing you there.....
Monday, 28 March 2011
Our Potato Weekend....
Bothwell Community Garden hosted its Potato Weekend on Saturday 26th and Sunday 27th of March. As well as having chitted potatoes on offer, the wonderful polytunnel team also had peas, mangetout, broad beans and chives already hardened-off and ready for planting; as well as basalt rock dust, our 'black gold' worm cast and organic fertiliser.
The office was open to allow members to renew their annual subscriptions and borrow books from our gardening library, and there was even a wonderful lunch provided by our resident Delia and Nigella, aka Avril and Susan....
It was lovely to see so many of you taking advantage of the lovely sunny weather and coming along to renew your subscriptions, stock up on your goodies for your raised beds and get cracking on starting afresh for the new growing season. The lovely weather meant that the volunteers also had the chance to plant sixteen new gooseberry bushes in the soft-fruit area on Sunday - check them out the next time you visit.
For those of you who were unable to make it, although we are now out of seed potatoes I have been assured by the polytunnel team that more peas and beans will be available in the next few weeks. There is plenty of rock dust and organic fertiliser still available, and don't forget that there is free worm cast available (1 bag per bed, half a bag for a half bed, please, to ensure there is enough for everyone).
Just a reminder - Annual subscriptions are due on April 1st 2011!!! Costs are the same as last year....
Happy gardening, and enjoy this lovely sunshine!
Jac
The office was open to allow members to renew their annual subscriptions and borrow books from our gardening library, and there was even a wonderful lunch provided by our resident Delia and Nigella, aka Avril and Susan....
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| Enjoying sunshine, lunch and good company at the Potato Weekend |
It was lovely to see so many of you taking advantage of the lovely sunny weather and coming along to renew your subscriptions, stock up on your goodies for your raised beds and get cracking on starting afresh for the new growing season. The lovely weather meant that the volunteers also had the chance to plant sixteen new gooseberry bushes in the soft-fruit area on Sunday - check them out the next time you visit.
For those of you who were unable to make it, although we are now out of seed potatoes I have been assured by the polytunnel team that more peas and beans will be available in the next few weeks. There is plenty of rock dust and organic fertiliser still available, and don't forget that there is free worm cast available (1 bag per bed, half a bag for a half bed, please, to ensure there is enough for everyone).
Just a reminder - Annual subscriptions are due on April 1st 2011!!! Costs are the same as last year....
Happy gardening, and enjoy this lovely sunshine!
Jac
Sunday, 27 March 2011
Welcome to our corner of the internet!
Hello and welcome to the Bothwell Community Garden blog. We hope this will become an invaluable resource for our members and friends, and anyone looking for information on organic gardening and community garden schemes.
We would love your help - photographs, gardening advice and hints, recipes you've created from your garden grown produce, articles of horticultural and/or environmental interest - please contact us on the email address above and become a contributor to our blog.
This blog is very much in its infancy at the moment - I will warn you in advance that you may see changes to the background or format over the next few days. Don't worry, that will just be me sitting here behind the scenes hitting it with a big cyber spanner.
Happy gardening!
Jac
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