Originally posted by General Woundwort
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A simple dude trying to grow veg. http://haywayne.blogspot.com/
BLOG UPDATED! http://haywayne.blogspot.com/2012/01...ar-demand.html 30/01/2012
Practise makes us a little better, it doesn't make us perfect.
What would Vedder do?
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Originally posted by piskieinboots View PostOh dear, I'm sounding like an Alison cheer leader
Originally posted by General Woundwort View PostI have cucumbers and chillis on my windowsill as well! My point was this is summat I've done for some time, and that the local climate at my previous site was somewhat against such outdoor growing.
Originally posted by General Woundwort View PostI understand that organic regulations allow for certain metals to be used in fungicides, allowing build-up in the soil.
Originally posted by General Woundwort View PostThere actually is an organic food company called Holy Food.
Some of us live in the past, always talking about back then. Some of us live in the future, always planning what we are going to do. And, then there are those, who neither look behind or ahead, but just enjoy the moment of right now.
Which one are you and is it how you want to be?
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Originally posted by Alison View Post
goodness knows what they'd think about my sweet potatoesA simple dude trying to grow veg. http://haywayne.blogspot.com/
BLOG UPDATED! http://haywayne.blogspot.com/2012/01...ar-demand.html 30/01/2012
Practise makes us a little better, it doesn't make us perfect.
What would Vedder do?
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WTF? So it's OK to grow them if I do it in private and have been doing it for years, we all had a first time.
I wasn't suggesting that, but I was suggesting they tried to run before they could walk. I grow them on my windowsill because that's a suitable mini-climate for them. Nowt to do with it being in private.
So glad that attitude isn't prevelant on my plot, goodness knows what they'd think about my sweet potatoes
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Originally posted by General Woundwort View PostGiven that I doubt you'd give up if they fail, you have my vote. It's not instant gratification for you, as I'd do if when I have the space to give over to artichokes or asparagus.
Some of us live in the past, always talking about back then. Some of us live in the future, always planning what we are going to do. And, then there are those, who neither look behind or ahead, but just enjoy the moment of right now.
Which one are you and is it how you want to be?
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As for Holy Food, I remember it from some years ago, but can't find it now.
To each their own, of course, and I have little desire to cover my crops which chemicals.
I stand by my assertion that the organic industry has edged towards that concept. Other religiously-mandated dietry restrictions, such as kashrut, are the result of thousands of years of traditions and faith (before I'm accused of anything else, this is a religion which I'd have no objection to being mistaken as a follower of).
Organic devotees have made similar empirical observations of the surrounding world, but at the height of the Age of Science. Like the difference between homeopathic method and chiropracty.
~*dragged away from keyboad by dark swirling forces of overpowering intensity*~
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This one has gone weird. The initial bit I could see points on both sides. Plenty of allotments restrict the amount of space you can use for non-edible crops don't they?
It would be nice to think that a big site could make some allowance for keeping the organic growers a bit further away from the OTHER religious lot (Let Us Spray, weekly) by having the 'chemicals in emergencies only' people in a central section, but of course you could only really do that by having separate waiting lists, and that just wouldn't work.
I can see why those 'traditionalists' would find it annoying if the highly organic lady grower invited in wildlife by neglecting her plot, and the weeds seeded all over everyone else's patches, and would have some sympathy. There ARE those who only 'do' allotments because it has become fashionable (and I've seen a fair few threads deploring these types) and abandon the idea after a little while.
I don't think I'd want to use an allotment in the Thurso area. You'd need a really good windbreak to grow anything above ground apart from kale! Gales with a hefty windchill factor for 2 months in spring and 2 in autumn would kill of almost everything else.
I lived in Orkney for 15 years (left 10 years ago) and still have some 'contacts' that far North.Flowers come in too many colours to see the world in black-and-white.
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Originally posted by General Woundwort View Post
Zazen's site disallows sheds and greenhouses,
a = you?
b = this thread?
c = life, the universe, anything?
Originally posted by General Woundwort View Post
You responded to Two Shed's tongue 'n cheek remark about Tesco's cut-price range with the statement that the benefits system was similar. If you weren't saying those on benefits are comfortable with their positions, I apologize, but it was the way it looked.
May I please ask what the heck you are actually on about?
If you have a point, you seem to be arguing against it from one sentence to the next.
Either make the point or move on. Life's too short.
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What are you on about? My site doesn't disallow sheds or greenhouses.
No, I'm saying that BECAUSE nobody in this country is having to intensively farm every square inch of allotment space ~*snipples*~
The issue of frog ponds have been analysed to destruction, and I wouldn't advocate skewering them. Whilst they are benign (apart to inquisitive toddlers), sites general do have rules against stuff like bee-hives.
I could have both ponds and hives in my backgarden, and if ponds can come onto allotments, why not hives? Seriously.
Communal or council-owned land is a strange place for arch-individualists to come along to.
Can everyone stop hitting me?
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Originally posted by General Woundwort View Post
Can everyone stop hitting me?
Anyhow - I'm off to feed some worms, feed some comfrey tea to the toms, play with the ducks, watch the bees in the hives in next door's garden, eat some veggie chilli and call Fi's dad and tell him to take a seat as I think he's gonna need it.
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I can see why those 'traditionalists' would find it annoying if the highly organic lady grower invited in wildlife by neglecting her plot, and the weeds seeded all over everyone else's patches, and would have some sympathy.
HILARY B
I don't think I'd want to use an allotment in the Thurso area. You'd need a really good windbreak to grow anything above ground apart from kale!
There used to be three allotment sites in Thurso, including one opposite the sea-front caravan park you'd have driven past whenever using Scrabster, with a total of 60 or so plots. The site I'm trying to resurrect has an exposed front, but is protected on the other three sides.
A scheme started up at Lybster this year,
Orkney is much exposed.
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I think you'll find your opening post of skewering a pond and finding it 'delicious' may be part of the reason that people are 'hitting' you.
I also have admitted I phrased it badly, but I gotta ask... did you remonstrate with the telly when Blackadder would beat-up Baldrick?
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