A bx of plants arrived from Thompson and Morgan. I could remember that I was due another delivery from them, but not what I had ordered.
They were plug plants, and I didn't recognise them. Were they vegetable or flowers, for the beds or for pots? There was nothing inside the box to say, and I couldn't find the catalogue to check all I had marked off to order.
I went to look to see if there was any reference number on the box label so I could phone Thompson & Morgan to ask, to find the label said what they were sweet potato plugs.
I tried these last year without success, and looking on a Thompson & Morgan website I didn't see anything in the description to enlighten me as to why I decided to try again.
I've put them 2 each to a large pot, which I will keep indoors for a week or two.
I did put out the courgettes in cut-off 5 litre water bottles to protect from slugs and, hopefully, the fox cubs, and the tomatoes in these bottomless pots with a well round the outside for watering - hopefully also protected from the cubs. However, if the foxes do decide to play in that vegetable bed, then the protection won't be enough!
A blog about trying to live a green life in the city with as much of a country feel as possible. Vegetables, foraging, preserves, crafts, wildlife, community, recycling, cycling... Helen, Leyton, London, E10
Wednesday, May 18, 2016
Paying for carrying the logs
I had 20 bags of logs delivered today, paying for them to be carried through the house. As the way through the house and out through the conservatory has several kinks in it, and I have a dodgy back, I have in the past slit open the bags and carried the logs through in 2 goes (and the last time in 3). It has taken me ages.
Today I had logs through the house and stacked in under an hour.
New supplier. The bags seem lighter than the last load I had, and more small bits. It'll all burn though.
Today I had logs through the house and stacked in under an hour.
New supplier. The bags seem lighter than the last load I had, and more small bits. It'll all burn though.
Tuesday, May 17, 2016
Listening for the sound of rain
Just listened on catch-up to "During wind and rain: a British history in weather" - episode 7 "rain" on BBC Radio 4.
The early section was about telling where you were by the sound the rain makes on what it is falling on, in particular quoting Thomas Hardy but also noting the sound of rain in modern urban landscapes.
I want to try to see if even my cloth years can tell the difference in sound when, for instance, rain falls on walls and when rain falls on a hedge.
I will get my chance too, tomorrow when rain is forecast.
I hope the morning stays dry, or at least not more drizzle, as I have logs being delivered. I am paying for them to be carried through the house, but then need to stack them.
The early section was about telling where you were by the sound the rain makes on what it is falling on, in particular quoting Thomas Hardy but also noting the sound of rain in modern urban landscapes.
I want to try to see if even my cloth years can tell the difference in sound when, for instance, rain falls on walls and when rain falls on a hedge.
I will get my chance too, tomorrow when rain is forecast.
I hope the morning stays dry, or at least not more drizzle, as I have logs being delivered. I am paying for them to be carried through the house, but then need to stack them.
Sunday, May 15, 2016
Missing fox cubs
On Friday evening there were only 2 fox cubs playing in the garden - play fighting and chasing each other round and round. They looked as if they were having great fun, though I winced at the damage to my plants.
Then this morning (Sunday) there was only one cub.
What could be happening?
When there are 2 or 3 cubs they play together, when only one the adult plays with it.
Then this morning (Sunday) there was only one cub.
What could be happening?
When there are 2 or 3 cubs they play together, when only one the adult plays with it.
Saturday, May 14, 2016
Herb walk Walthamstow Marshes
Today was the third herb walk on the marshes, my second time of attending.
Colder than last month. I started off the day in a thin top, changed to a fleece, then added a vest, and popped on a zipped fleece just before I left the house.
We also didn't get as far, but still very interesting.
Will be watching out for plantain on any walks in case needed for a spit poultice for bites and stings.
I also intend soaking hawthorn berries in brandy later in the year for a heart tonic (reputed good for emotional upset as well as physically good for the heart).
At the Oxfam shop at the end of Walthamstow High Street, just over the road from the start of Coppermill Lane where there is our meeting place "The Mill", I found a long length of ecru coloured fabric. It is a loose weave and one one side feels very natural but on the other a bit synthetic. It was only £3.49. I am planning what to make - my first idea is a loose over top, two rectangles for the body and then a rectangle each for the sleeves.
Colder than last month. I started off the day in a thin top, changed to a fleece, then added a vest, and popped on a zipped fleece just before I left the house.
We also didn't get as far, but still very interesting.
Will be watching out for plantain on any walks in case needed for a spit poultice for bites and stings.
I also intend soaking hawthorn berries in brandy later in the year for a heart tonic (reputed good for emotional upset as well as physically good for the heart).
At the Oxfam shop at the end of Walthamstow High Street, just over the road from the start of Coppermill Lane where there is our meeting place "The Mill", I found a long length of ecru coloured fabric. It is a loose weave and one one side feels very natural but on the other a bit synthetic. It was only £3.49. I am planning what to make - my first idea is a loose over top, two rectangles for the body and then a rectangle each for the sleeves.
Sunday, May 1, 2016
Birds in spring
Today I have seen:
2 swans doing a courtship dance on the Lea Navigation (only seen this in photographs until this morning)
a sparrow feeding a young sparrow
Sparrows collecting the feathery bits from my neighbour's pampas grass
2 wood pigeons courting
I also saw swifts for the first time this year
2 swans doing a courtship dance on the Lea Navigation (only seen this in photographs until this morning)
a sparrow feeding a young sparrow
Sparrows collecting the feathery bits from my neighbour's pampas grass
2 wood pigeons courting
I also saw swifts for the first time this year
Fox cubs in the garden.
The other day, looking out of my bedroom window I saw one adult cub and a fox cub playing in the garden.
Then yesterday I saw one adult fox, and 2 cubs playing together.
I am not sure where the den is, with the first sighting it seemed it might be under my neighbour's pampas grass. Often when I am gardening I hear a sound part cough, part grunt coming from there. However a new hole has appeared under the concrete by the autumn raspberries* which was by where the 2 cubs were playing yesterday.
Some years ago, 2 years running, my neighbour's rhubarb and potatoes were ruined by playing fox clubs - it is rather like having toddlers playing football in the garden but without the danger of broken windows.
Already there is a lot of flattened plants, including the tulips, and two foxgloves which have lost their flowering tips. Some of this might be the adult fox lying in the morning sunshine, but there is much more flattened bits than usual.
I got tomato plants and courgette plants yesterday. Too early to put them out, but am trying to think of ways to protect them from the foxes.
But I did enjoy watching them play!
* I cut these down in February but most of them don't seem to be growing again, and I don't think it is the layer of extra earth from the den-digging that's upset them.
Then yesterday I saw one adult fox, and 2 cubs playing together.
I am not sure where the den is, with the first sighting it seemed it might be under my neighbour's pampas grass. Often when I am gardening I hear a sound part cough, part grunt coming from there. However a new hole has appeared under the concrete by the autumn raspberries* which was by where the 2 cubs were playing yesterday.
Some years ago, 2 years running, my neighbour's rhubarb and potatoes were ruined by playing fox clubs - it is rather like having toddlers playing football in the garden but without the danger of broken windows.
Already there is a lot of flattened plants, including the tulips, and two foxgloves which have lost their flowering tips. Some of this might be the adult fox lying in the morning sunshine, but there is much more flattened bits than usual.
I got tomato plants and courgette plants yesterday. Too early to put them out, but am trying to think of ways to protect them from the foxes.
But I did enjoy watching them play!
* I cut these down in February but most of them don't seem to be growing again, and I don't think it is the layer of extra earth from the den-digging that's upset them.
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