The Guard Cat
One of the menagerie on the lookout for the pesky pigeons, chance would be a fine thing.
The Guard Cat
One of the menagerie on the lookout for the pesky pigeons, chance would be a fine thing.
After an awful lot of very deep digging, a painstaking task because the area was infested with a lot of perennial weed such as dock and horsetail the new rhubarb beds are now planted and mulched down with a thick layer of well rotted manure and straw. The plants were a mixture of old existing plants that we have divided and some new stock that we grew from seed a couple of years ago. All we now need are some Victorian rhubarb forcers (dream on).
This will hopefully allow far more light to reach the back of the veggie quarter. Fingers crossed there will be some regrowth and they can then be clipped into a dividing hedge.
The big problem now is removing all of the resultant rubbish. Clearing work will continue this week removing self set trees and cutting down some extremely tall laurels.
We will leave the plants to establish through the summer and start to trim and shape them next year. Not bad for free.
The first of the digging has started on this quarter although it is very slow and painstaking work due to an infestation of dock and horsetail. All we can do this season is to fork out as much as possible and treat with a stump / deep root killer where there are no crops.
Welcome to the world of the walled kitchen garden, a productive, technological marvel yet now neglected. A lost garden. The restoration of a country estate kitchen garden to some semblance of its former glory, is the main topic of this blog. Our main 'veggie' interest, is growing Heritage varieties, especially things that could have been growing in our garden in its heyday during the Edwardian era.We will be keeping a diary of the garden our successes or failures during the coming seasons.