TAMING AN OVERGROWN ALLOTMENT
Some advice which may be applicable to your situation – take the bits which
work for you. Every site is different, every gardener has different needs, abilities
and resources.
Clearing
Allotments are big, too big for most people to dig over and clear in a weekend.
Start by clearing a manageable part at first, even just a tenth, maybe also
see if a friend would like to share both the work and the produce with you.
A small area well-tended is more productive and fun than a larger, weedy and
half empty space.
The bit which you are going to prepare for immediate use requires careful digging
to remove the main bulk of perennial roots, after any rampant growth has been
cut off. Small side roots of nettles will not regrow but most others need removing
in their entirety, couch grass and bindweed especially. If you have time, a
secondary passage after two or three weeks with a trowel, to remove roots that
are still growing, will be worthwhile.
If rotovating to cut up weeds and gain a mechanical tilth, remember that chopped
up roots of many perennial weeds will regrow. Just occasionally, if rotovation
is done at the onset of a long dry spell of weather, these roots may shrivel
and die. If it stays damp after rotovating, many perennial roots will need removing,
and this may be easier, out of loose soil, than without passage of a rotovators.
Bedmaking
Then, ideally, you could make some beds of any size by simply putting compost
or well rotted manure on top. No! not so simple. What compost or manure? I can’t
advise for every situation, sometimes municipalities sell ‘green waste
compost’, sometimes not. There may be a local stables but you need to
find a car (or tractor) and trailer to bring in enough manure, preferably dark
and well rotted.
Organic farmers don’t usually sell manure – they need it all and
value it too highly – and recently (summer 08) there have been problems
with contaminated manure from non organic farms. It has been realised, too late,
that some animal dung contains herbicide from their diet of treated grass or
hay. so try asking questions of your source like “was the feed grass sprayed
with aminopyralid herbicide?” Yes we live in a rotten world!
Beds with compost on are often bordered with wood of 6” (15cm) width,
but this is not obligatory. Enclosed beds are clearly defined and look neater,
but their edges can dry out more in summer than unbordered beds where compost
is allowed to spill slightly into pathways. It is not wasted because roots feed
into paths and also use them as a moisture resource.
If your compost is soft and even, you can sow or plant straightaway. Otherwise
it works best to make beds at least a month before starting to sow or plant,
so that a little weathering can happen and perhaps a first flush of weeds can
be hoed off or hand weeded. If you rush straight in, things risk being a little
tricky – there will possibly be more residual slugs, weeds, lumps of unweathered
soil, compost etc.
Is it your first time growing vegetables? If so, take a good look around at
how neighbours are coping with all these issues, and what crops are growing
well. Be prepared for some failures until you have enough experience to appreciate
what works for you.
Mulching
The uncultivated remainder of your space could be mown or scythed and then covered
with black polythene or old carpet (not too old in case it disintegrates into
horrible synthetic pieces). Cardboard can be used but will decompose before
perennial weeds such as couch grass, docks, dandelions and buttercup are dead,
so it will need renewing after 4-8 weeks. When used for clearing ground, cardboard
is best weighed down with a few stones or poles around its edges.
Perennial weeds that are mulched take different lengths of time to die off,
according to how much food and energy they have stored in their roots. The following
lengths of time in complete darkness are to give you an idea: stinging nettles
and buttercup 2 months, docks and dandelions 4 months, ground elder 6 months,
bindweed and mares tail 12 months plus. These are approximate numbers, times
will be less in summer and more in winter.
If you are faced with only annual weeds (bliss!), cardboard is still useful
as the first layer of a weed free mulch, with 3-4” compost on top which
can be sown or planted into. Planting works better than sowing, for which you
need a propagation facility of some sort to raise strong, healthy plants.
Maintenance
A four inch depth of compost is the one-off, initial application. Once a no
dig system is up and running, with perennial weeds removed and only vegetables
growing, the annual application of organic matter is no greater than on any
other well run garden, about 1-2” per annum. It is to keep soil alive
and healthy, as much as for the nutrients it brings in. All the soil fauna and
fungi that are not damaged by digging can become more abundant and help plants
to grow more healthily.
Putting compost and composted manure on top serves to create, over time, a soil
that is well structured but firm, free draining but also moisture retentive,
and darker on top, with a superficial tilth that can be sown or planted into.
This approach works well for carrots and parsnips, crops that are supposed to
fork when compost or manure has been added. Potatoes are the only vegetable
I know which prefer loose, mechanically disturbed soil.
In essence, one is feeding soil rather than individual crops or plants, which
thrive in the improved medium you have created. As you work towards this happy
situation, gardening becomes more enjoyable and creative, with less of the routine
weeding above all, as long as you do not allow any of the smaller number of
weeds to go to seed.
For more information, check out my books or come on a course day at Lower Farm.
Next article....
Back to "Articles"