Still not a lot happening on the allotment and therefore I have taken good shots of soil - mostly. 
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| Comfrey plants starting to come into leaf. | 
The comfrey is starting to grow now.  I will be taking a crop off it during May probably.  I could really do with some now though because I am running out very quickly.    
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| The new path up to the shed should make harvesting the comfrey easy. | 
The path to the new shed will make harvesting the comfrey that much easier.  This bed will need hoeing soon because there are a lot of small weed seedlings just germinating.  
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| The roots bed | 
I have just put in three rows of parsnips and two rows of carrots.  I will cover the carrots with enviromesh next week to keep off the carrot root fly.  I was going to sow the other roots but I needed to plant the sweet peas.  You can just about make out the rhubarb in the background.  I have had this covered up to now but today I took the covers off.  I took as many of the forced stems as I thought prudent and put the bins, that were covering the rhubarb, away.
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| Strawberries | 
I have just given the stawberries a really good feed but they still look poor at the moment.  I am hoping that they will perk up a little  in the next few weeks.  
You can see the cloche wire frames for the enviromesh cover  over the carrots.  
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| Potato bed from the south end | 
 The Oca is in the bottom left corner of the photograph.  You can't see them because I have just planted them. 
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| Potato bed from north end | 
Not much happening on the potato bed but all the potatoes are in now.  I just hope that I don't get any severe frosts.  I will keep hoeing them up so that they are covered if there is a frost.  So more photographs of just soil  for the moment.  
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| Tarpaulin over the onion bed. | 
  I will be taking the tarpaulin off the onion bed as soon as the onions have grown a little more and need to be put outside.  I might put it over where the Florence fennel and lettuce are going when I water on some of the slug and snail nematodes. It might give the nematodes some protection and they can clear off any slugs under the tarpaulin.  
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| Garlic with the tulips | 
I was not expecting these tulips to be flowering this year because the bulbs were so small.  They seem to be doing really well and will give a good show.  I have spread out the compost that I put on this bed and it has produced a good friable soil to plant into.
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| The bigger bulbs are on the left and these are producing large flowers. | 
The garlic has just had a good feed of comfrey tea and they seem to have appreciated it.  There is a tree peony at the end of the tulip row which did not fare very well last year.  It is doing much better now.   
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| Rhubarb, sweet cicely and blackberry. | 
Although the blackberry post looks as if it is lean precariously over the path, it is remarkably firmly anchored in the soil.  I will take it out at the end of this year and make sure it is upright.  The rhubarb is from the rhubarb that I found on the allotment when I took it over. That was thirty years ago.  I just kept dividing and planting new crowns.    
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| Sweet peas | 
These are two of the sweet pea lines.  Restormel (redish) is on the left and Valerie Harrod (peachy) is on the right. I had too many of both but I am not going to give any away until the seedlings have started to grow and I can be sure that I will not loose any.  
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| A forest of canes | 
I really am hoping for a good show of sweet peas this year after all the disappointment of loosing most of the autumn sown ones.  Hopefully they will do well this year.  
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| Chionodoxa sardensis | 
Chinodoxa is flowering now that the cyclamen has gone over.  I forget what else I have in this little corner. 
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| Blackcurrant bushes | 
I moved these blackcurrant bushes last winter and they seem to have weathered the move.  They have a lot of big bud mite on them so I will have to cut them back next autumn.  I might not get any fruit next year but it will mean that I will have cured the big bud.  
I am walking all over the brassicae bed but I am not worried because I like to put the brassicas in a firm soil. 
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| Where the brassicas will go | 
 I am keeping the old branches for the pea lines so they will be moved off here soon.  I don't like leaving a pile of poles like this because it attracts the slugs and snails.  Two lines of transplanted broad beans are doing well.  I watered these in with comfrey.  I think they will be out of the way before I put the winter cauliflowers in.  
The primulas are putting on a bit of a show.  The viburnum will produce a heady sent in the next few weeks.  
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| Viburnum | 
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| The path to the tap | 
You can just about see that I am adding even more compost to the pea bed because I want a mound to put the squashes onto.  The compost is really friable but I do tend to get it all over the place when transporting it with the wheel barrow.  The aubricia has started to flower well now, however I would have liked it to be a little more spectacular than this.  
The winter cauliflower in the picture is starting to make a cauliflower.
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| Winter cauliflower | 
 It is only small at the moment so I will leave it to grow a little bigger.  It is only one of three that have survived the winter - out of 25.
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| Pea bed | 
This bed has had a thick layer of compost spread over it.  I am not going to dig it in but just leave it on the surface.  It does have some weed seeds in it but I will just hoe them out.  You can just about see the other two winter cauliflowers at the edge of the bed.  
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| French bean poles | 
I will have to hoe again under the French bean poles because the compost is throwing up a lot of weed seeds here.  
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| Trackway | 
As you can see the trackway is dry.  It seems that my drainage pipe and the dryish weather has meant that I do not have to slosh through the stream that runs down here.  I have put shreddings alongside my allotment but I want to either put some more on here or sow it with grass.  I am not sure what I will do at the moment. 
Although there is still a lot of bare soil in the photographs, there are some things that are starting to grow.  I will expect to see a lot more growth in next months' photographs. 
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| Poor old bay tree | 
My bay tree suffered during the winter.  I did not have a greenhouse at the allotment to put it in and it is a little too big now in any case. I will prune it back very severely and see if I can stimulate it into growth. 
 
 
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