Sunday, 30 March 2014

The Animal Sanctuary

While browsing Facebook a few weeks ago I came upon a job vacancy with a difference. A voluntary position at Yorkshire Animal Shelter. I've always wanted to work with animals since being very young, I missed out on veterinary nursing college because I couldn't get the GCSEs required in maths and English, and now with my work experience only being in retail and creative work any job I apply for I get knocked back from. Working with animals is highly sort after work even if it's not particularly well paid.
So when I see I could gain a little experience I jump at the chance. Yorkshire Animal Shelter mainly takes in the over spill from the RSPCA basically saving them from death row. They have a horse, 8 sheep, 1 chicken, 1 rabbit and 6 cat currently although I'm informed this is a quiet time.

www.yorkshireanimalshelter.org.uk If you can help them do even if it's only collecting stamps.

So I meet the animals. Suzie a 15+ year old horse with arthritis and cushings disease and she's also retty deaf. Poor Suzie was bought by a naive lady wanting a show jumper of around 9 years old, when she found out actually Suzie was neither 9 or in a fit state for jumping it was either the rescue or the slaughter house for Suzie. So we start the day by feeding Suzie a mixture of feed, apples, carrots, biscuits and breadcakes as well as oil and cider vinegar (good for her joints). Suzie doesn't wear horse shoes but needs the mud and grass cleaning from her feet daily, she's not 100% happy about it because of her sore joints. By what is now my 3rd week I've learned to lift her feet by running my hands down her legs and grasping the wispy hair down near her feet and holding the hoof close to the toe whilst leaning in to her (although she ended up leaning on me.) Then taking the hoof pick to firmly but gently remove the mud from the hoof. Her back feet are a little harder as she finds it uncomfortable so we have to bend down lower (exposing gardeners arse crack to the world.) This week with help from Abbie I cleaned all 4 hooves. Result!



2 of the sheep also have arthritis but plod on in their retirement. The rest of the sheep including Larry and Baby Lambkins follow me round the field while I shovel poo into a wheel barrow. Picking the poo not only keeps the field from becoming a pooey mess but also the poo gets added to the onsite allotment. Can't go wrong with lotsa veg.



Then there's Queenie the only hen currently at the sanctuary, they usually take in ex-battery hens for their retirement but at the moment Queenie happily scatches around the allotments alone. Abbie tells me they will be getting more ex-batteries again soon which I can't wait to see. Chickens should be happy and free. Queenie is 8 and a oriental breed so produces greenish eggs. However being 8 she is past her laying age but this week she surprised us both, as I leaned in to clean the hen house I see a single egg in the corner. Amazing, just goes to show what a happy animal can do.



Anyway I'm learning already and I love it looking forward to my work week after week also lotsa wildlife around too. Next Friday I get to see the farrier at work, the way he handles Suzie might help me with her. Can't wait.

Appologies for the Instagraming taking the real camera tomorrow.

Wednesday, 26 March 2014

Spring Getting More Springy

It's now late March and things are beginning to happen, my roof is being done currently so little can be done outside as a huge pile of slate and timber sits in the middle of what was a lawn. However indoors there's a little action.
My mushrooms are sprouting away and I've had a few but probably not as many as I could, mushroom are easy to forget about I must admit but the soil NEEDS to be kept moist. Another problem is with their love for warmish moist conditions they do attract some tiny little flies, I can't think of a way to remedy this unfortunately so I just keep them as far away from us as possible while still being indoors. This is one of my chestnut mushrooms, I left it a little too long before picking, it's still good to eat but you should pick them before the gills underneath show.


Second the tomato seedlings have really took off and I've transplanted the strongest of the plants into a pot so I can sow more seeds in the propagator. The pepper seedlings have just started to show too, they take longer than tomatoes. No sign of butternut squash seedlings yet =(. We've also got microgreen herbs and Chinese chives from the James Wong selection on their way.


Now I'm very scatty and there are plants I plant and forget about. About 18 months ago I bought small fig tree only half a foot tall at The Range thinking oh well that'll be different. I re-potted it and it grew. It loses it's leaves in Winter and has to be brought indoors to avoid frost. When I moved house last Autumn I left the fig tree, lovingly named Phileas Fig with my mum. She looked after him over Winter and the other week tells me "that tree shot up and it's got new leaves." I took a look, now mum's hallway is very small and a bit gloomy so as well as getting in the way poor Phileas wasn't getting the nourishing light he needs so he's a little pale. But to my surprise there were 2 little green nodules growing from the tree. Figs! Wow unexpected he's still only small. He's gonna need some multi-purpose feed and when he's moved outdoors after any frost risk has gone I'll grab some manure from the animal sanctuary. Tomato feed once every 3 weeks helps too according to RHS. He's now in my hallway, alot more room and light till he can go outside.



Thursday, 13 March 2014

Spring Starting to Spring

Well the weather has arrived the bbqs are out and the sun has it's hat of hurray! And the signs of spring are everywhere. I spent yesterday at my local park because I heard the local wildlife had come out for spring and were getting busy in the pond. The rumors were correct, a corner of the pond sheltered by reeds was full of frogs and their spawn. Wow they had been busy froggies. I plan to add a pond to my garden, I don't expect masses of frogs visiting and having their young but any water source is valuable to all wildlife especially in the height of summer, I won't add fish to the pond as every Tom, Dick and Harry on this street owns a cat. Also fish need to be kept safe from ice in winter.



As well as the frogs the crocus beds were stunning. I plan of buy some crocus bulbs that flower in autumn, they are a different breed which produce saffron, a spice worth more than it's weight in gold.  http://www.suttons.co.uk/Gardening/Flower+Bulbs/All+Bulbs/Saffron+Crocus+Bulbs_MH2993.htm#230169. They're also great for bees and being late flowering they keep bees going through autumn.


My pots of joy and window boxes are looking good too. Mini daffs are out and looking fab just waiting on most of the big ones now, yes Spring is in the air.


PS The seedlings are starting to emerge and we have mushrooms on the way, more updates soon, in the meantime here's a dove that lives on the bowling green and eats at our bird cafe.


Thursday, 20 February 2014

A Bit about my New Kingdom.

I realize since moving to this new house with it's 2 gardens I haven't posted on it. The house has 2 gardens a back and a front, the back is the biggest, it's south facing and where my Grandad used to plant all his greens. However as mentioned in an earlier post my Grandad left this Earth before I was born so the garden hasn't been producing veg for over 26 years. Instead my Grandma was a big fan of anything that flowers so both gardens are now full of bulbs, bedding plants, shrubs and one lawn the size of a postage stamp. As well as these there are 2 holly bushes which the birds love (but I don't) and an Ivy which started growing up a washing line pole but has now taken over the entire garden wall.



This garden is great for the wildlife and I want to keep it that way but more in harmony with the productivity I want to bring to it. It's gonna be hard work as it's so overgrown now. Currently I've began removing the bedding plants and daffodils, I don't want to get rid of them as my Gran loved them to I've found some neglected pots lying around so, with some fresh compost I've added the plants to the pots, they look lovely sat on the door steps.









The front garden is probably less than half the size, North facing and encircled by a privet hedge. It's pretty dark but looks out over a council bowling green where the staff actively encourage wildlife so we get lots of bird and of course Bill the squirrel. In fact at the moment we have a pair of blue tits looking at making their nest in the air vent next to or bedroom window. Anyway this garden is just full of snow drops, bedding plants and a hydrangea. To be honest I really don't know what to do here besides trimming the hedge and finding some shade loving crops, maybe I'll try forcing some rhubarb here. It would be a shame to make all the snow drops homeless though.

Friday, 14 February 2014

New Lemon Tree and Mushroom Growing too.

I hate Ikea, but the other day I saw some thing that didn't require delivery, assembly or an allen key. It was a lemon tree, just a couple of feet tall and costing £20. But something bothered me and that was all the signs around them saying "fruit is not edible" and "please do not  eat the fruit". I went home to read up on why this is. I suspected it was just to stop people stealing the fruit as I has never heard of a purely ornamental lemon tree. Reading on the Grow Your Own forum http://www.growfruitandveg.co.uk/  a person had the same experience at Aldi and the experts say it is because the tree and fruit has probably been sprayed with pesticides and other nasties but after the fruit growing in store has gone further fruit will be fine. Great we went out again and brought our lemon tree home and named it Jonny, after a friend who used to call himself Mr Lemon.



Something bothered me though and that was the size of the pot Jonny was crammed into, poor thing. It's roots had emerged on the surface, this is the sign of a pot-bound tree. So off I went to my local garden center (I tried The Range first but word of advice, they're useless) to buy citrus compost. You should plant citrus plants in special compost because they are very picky. A pH of 6.5 is ideal,they don't like acid or alkaline very much at all. It also needs to drain well. They also need feeding often especially in the summer. For now Jonny lives indoors in the corner of my living room but in summer He'll probably go live on the step outside the door.



My next little (indoor) project at the moment is mushrooms. Chestnut mushrooms to be exact. I bought a little kit from The Range for £3.99 which is a good price as they're usually about £8. Maybe you pay for what you get but we'll find out. The kit is basically just a box with a lid, wet compost and substrate covered in mushroom spores. Follow the instructions, keep moist, warm and dark and wait for the mushrooms. I tried one of the little kits from the pound shop before and they are good, mushrooms only take a couple of weeks to pop up. Can't wait chestnut mushrooms are great in a stir fry or risotto.



Photos will be added when the mushrooms grow but for now I thought this was funny ^

Wednesday, 29 January 2014

Sowing the Seeds of Love

Right the time has come to fill my windowsills with seed trays. Tomatoes and peppers need their head start in January/February so that when the frost has gone in March/April they're ready to go straight outside either in pots or into the soil in the sunniest place possible.

So I began with filling seed tray cells with 1 Gardener's Delight  tomato seed each, tomatoes are probably the easiest crop to produce with the best most satisfying results. In the other half of the tray I have sown 1 mini bell pepper seed per cell. I've had some bad luck with conventional pepper varieties as they seem to grow to a certain size when I have to pick them because if I leave them any longer they rot, but when I pick them and try them out they don't taste sweet just bland and boring. I have chosen this mini variety hoping they will take less time to mature and just like cherry tomatoes they will have more taste.

I have also put in a row of butternut squash seeds, according to the seed packet they shouldn't be planted till May but I'm really eager to see how they do as I've never grown them before as they take up alot of space. Mr Veg has a great recipe for a goats cheese and squash lasagna which we'd love to try with home grown squash. If the growing is successful I'll share the recipe.  

In another tray I have descended to put in more James Wong seeds I've never tasted before. These include Chinese Chives which are supposed to taste of roasted garlic, Microgreen Herbs which grow quickly like cress and go great in salads and on top of burgers. The final seed I've set off are Inca Berries which are cherry tomato sized yellow fruits that are supposed to taste of gooseberries, kiwi and pineapple, so really looking forward to tasting them. The great thing is once grown they should produce berries right into winter.




Saturday, 4 January 2014

Hibernation and New Year Plans

My posts here are becoming a bit few and far between..... Sorry. I am planning on picking up properly again soon but at the moment the wild weather is rather keeping me in a semi-hibernation and out of the garden.

That said I have noticed one or two things. The first is the holly bushes I have in my new garden, these bushes come December are usually full of berries, this is to help support birds and small mammals through the hash winter. But this year the bush is empty and the same is true of the holly tree back at my old patch. Does this then mean a mild winter? Also as I put out fat balls weekly for the squadron of sparrows that visit my garden they are not going down as quick as they usually do, the birds mustn't be too concerned about building fat reserves then. So my best guess (better than the Daily Express anyway) is that it's probably gonna be a wet, windy but mild winter, not bad for wildlife.



Regarding my new years resolution my first was to break the plastic bag habit, there really is nothing worse than seeing a supermarket bag flying around in the wind or even worse, stuck in a tree for days/months on end. I've even dug them up in my old patch. Yuk! It benefits sea life too, it sickens me when I hear of whales found with a stomach full of rubbish or rescued turtles and dolphins caught up in plastic. So no I don't need a bag I've got a cotton one thanks ;-).


Next is simple I'm going to try and help my local wildlife even more, by planting insect friendly plants around my plots, hopefully adding a small pond and making some little hidy holes for mammals (or whoever wants to use em). I've seen foxes round the area on my late night and early morning drives so hopefully over the coming year I'll have more to report on these urban cuties. Oh then there's Bill. Bill is our resident squirrel, at the moment he's a little shy, I catch glimpses of him on my way to work, but back in Autumn he was out front searching for conkers so I threw him a few peanuts. I like Bill, even though I'm a big supporter of native species I guess round here is not ideal for reds anyway, Bill can stay.

                                                               Say hello to Bill!