With the first real ‘icy blast’ due in the UK this week, here’s a useful video reminder of some key jobs to do before winter really takes hold! (Thanks to Grow Veg)
At last a half day of dry weather allowed us a window in which to cut our last meadow on the allotments. This meadow is situated close to our very mature oak tree and within the grasses we grow wildflowers and cultivated plants that we know attract bees, butterflies and moths, hoverflies and all sorts of beneficial insects. It is home too to amphibians, small mammals and even grasshoppers and crickets. The flowering plants here this year just have not stopped flowering their hearts out so we have left cutting the meadow down until last.
So early in November four of us set to with strimmers, mowers and rakes and we made sure we had our water proof clothes at the ready. An hour into our work and we needed them. But we persevered and got the job done. Beautiful rainbows came out to wish us luck.
A few weeks…
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Note: This is the first of a series of articles on how to grow and use different food plants. It’s one of a number produced recently by particpants in a ‘Grow Your Own’ course I’ve been running in the village of Foulsham, Norfolk. I thought the work deserved a wider audience and hope that you find it useful. I’ll post other articles in coming weeks.

Sow seed every 2-3 weeks to have a constant supply of leaves
Do not transplant the seedlings – coriander doesn’t like to be moved
Keep the soil moist, but do not over water
Don’t water in the evening – coriander doesn’t like to “go to bed with wet feet”
Pick leaves regularly once they are 10cm (4in) high
Use the stems as well as the leaves, and allow some plants to flower so you can collect the seed
Freeze any excess coriander in a plastic bag, and use from frozen
Don’t grow in a confined space indoors as the plant has an unpleasant smell
Avoid planting near fennel, as they just don’t like one another!

Hazel Dormice via Somerset Wildlife Trust

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