Planting record
12 March 2023 05:38 pmMore planting (despite the chill): some flax, in the hopes of getting a usable crop of linseed (I got a decent number of seeds off my single random flax plant last year, presumably dropped or blown in from a bird-feeder, but not enough to eat if I wanted to save any for planting), and a dozen marigold seeds sown two to a compartment in an old biscuit-tray :-p
Corn-marigolds, corn-chamomile and calendulas I probably don't need to sow at all, although I have the saved seed, since they are popping up everywhere; very few of the poppies that are putting on adult leaves seem to be the Oriental poppies (possibly not so cold-hardy), so I might want to sow a few of those. I still need to plant Swan River daisies, cornflowers, nasturtiums, probably rudbeckias (the one that over-wintered doesn't look all that healthy), chives, probably alyssum, mesembryanthemums, rocket and basil. I do have some saved chrysanthemum seed since it seemed wasteful not to harvest it, but it is now two years old and the plants weren't a great success at the time...
Corn-marigolds, corn-chamomile and calendulas I probably don't need to sow at all, although I have the saved seed, since they are popping up everywhere; very few of the poppies that are putting on adult leaves seem to be the Oriental poppies (possibly not so cold-hardy), so I might want to sow a few of those. I still need to plant Swan River daisies, cornflowers, nasturtiums, probably rudbeckias (the one that over-wintered doesn't look all that healthy), chives, probably alyssum, mesembryanthemums, rocket and basil. I do have some saved chrysanthemum seed since it seemed wasteful not to harvest it, but it is now two years old and the plants weren't a great success at the time...
no subject
Date: 2023-03-15 06:01 pm (UTC)I really like oats. I love oatcakes, both the 'biscuit' type and the kind you fry in a pan.
We're working on adding lots of compost and manure to the allotment. The soil is noticeably better than it was, but I think we've a few more years work yet. It waterlogs very badly in winter, the raspberries get root rot.
I'm not quite clear about what triggered the shift from oats to barley?
no subject
Date: 2023-03-16 11:41 pm (UTC)Apparently another version of that rhyme is "Oats, peas, beans and barley grow", although I always knew it as 'oats and beans' -- I suspect it goes back before potatoes in any case. It sounds very mediaeval as a crop system.
Well, according to the chap on the radio, it was the loss of the market for horse-fodder -- oats and hay being the standard feed for any animals not 'out to grass', i.e. every animal in a town and a lot of those kept in peak working/riding condition elsewhere. I assume that the people who were previously raising oats for sale as fodder switched to raising barley as an alternative cash crop; by the end of the 19th century Britain was importing vast amounts of beef and wheat from North America, where the scale of the farms enabled them to undercut domestic production costs to such a degree that it was cheaper to pay to ship food across the Atlantic than it was to grow it locally. The British beef farmer had to cultivate and fence his pastures and move his herd from one small field to the next: the American rancher just let his steers fend for themselves, then drove them off to the nearest railhead and meatpacking plant.