Author: oldlanelottswp
Stores Shop

Just to let members know I wont be on site 4th – 8th April. Although Mick Hogan (Chairman plot 30) is going to cover the stores in my absence it would be as well to purchase stores items this week Tuesday 29th March – Sunday 3rd April ( mornings) for compost, fertilisers , & stock items.
Kind Regards Mark Burton (Allotment Secretary)
Hedgehogs to be released on Old Lane Allotments
hedgehogs

Christine on Plot 15/16 has a friend who takes in poorly hedgehogs ,she has three to release back into there natural habitat (after rehabilitation) and is going to put them on our site, along with a couple of hedgehog hotels ,near to where they will be released. We just want plot holders to be vigilant when strimming or burning items. There are other hazardous materials to hedgehogs such as slug pellets & netting that isn’t in use, Chemical’s are also a danger to them including pesticides. Turning over of compost heaps were a hedgehog could be resting in daylight hours. So can we all think about items we might have left out on our plots & put them away. Lets keep hedgehogs safe.
Blog created by Mark Burton (Allotment Secretary)
Grow Organic Fertiliser
Grow Organic is a 100% organic fertiliser, it improves soil & breaks clay. I have included some pictures so plot members can read what it can be used for, & what the benefits are. We stock a minimum quantity and the price is £7.00 & would cover 1/2 plot if spread out & dug in. People who use it say it is as good as cow manure without all the hassle of delivery & off course the mess. It can be used for different applications.
All monies taken go towards the up keep of the site.
OLD LANE ALLOTMENTS COMMITTEE
Mains Water Turned Back On
Mains water

The Mains water has now been switched back on for the site.
Blog by Mark Burton (Allotment Secretary)
SEED POTATOES – How To Plant & Harvest.
Planting potatoes
Plant your chitted potatoes when the soil starts to warm up, usually in mid- March to early April. Start by digging a trench 7.5 – 13cm (3-5 inch) deep, add a sprinkling of fertiliser to your trench before you begin planting. Plant early potatoes about 30cm (12 inch) apart with 40-50cm (16-20 inch) between the rows, second earlies & maincrops about 38cm (15 inch) apart with 75cm (30 inch) between the rows. Handle your chitted seed potatoes (tubers) with care, gently setting them in to the trench with the shoots pointing upwards, be really careful not to break the shoots. Cover the potatoes lightly with soil & fill in the trench. As soon as the shoots appear, earth up each plant by covering it with a ridge of soil so the shoots are just buried. You need to do this at regular intervals creating a small mound around the plant to prevent any sun damage or element damage.
Harvesting
Your home grown potatoes should be ready for lifting from June until September, depending on the varieties & the growing conditions. Earlies can be lifted & eaten as soon as they are ready, this will be when above -ground growth is still green,& usually as soon as the flowers open on the plant. Second & maincrop varieties can be kept in the ground much longer, until late September, even though above-ground growth may well be looking past its best. Two weeks before you lift the crop, cut the growth off the plants at ground level. This should give the skins of the potatoes sufficient time to toughen up, making them far less prone to damage from lifting and easier to store.
Blog written by Mark Burton (Allotment Secretary)
Pathways – Between Plots
Successional Sowing
SUCCESSIONAL SOWING
Successional sowing
It is easy to freeze are vegetable’s if we have a glut of crops. Fresh vegetable’s however that have been picked a few hours earlier & cooked always taste so much better. So to avoid growing a glut over the growing season we need to have smaller quantities ripening over a period. Say we are going to use a cabbage each week , take a modular seed tray & plant three seeds, label them with the variety & date. While they are developing pot on into three inch pots. Then three weeks later sow another three seeds as your first set of seeds are developing. Continue the process, that way you wont have too many of the same crop all ready at the same time.
This method can be applied to any crop that you have started in pots.
Blog By Mark Burton (Allotment Secretary)
Contact Details

CONTACT DETAILS
DEAR PLOT MEMBERS
If anyone changes their address, mobile telephone numbers,
or E mail details, please can you let the Secretary (Mark Burton) know as soon as possible. It is imperative that are records are correct for the site working alongside Leeds City Council.
OLD LANE ALLOTMENTS ASSOCIATION
How a chitted Seed Potato should be looking
My good friend Mick Cooper sent me these two pictures which I will explain. The seed potato on the left hand side has been left in a dark environment this showing that the growth is light in colour & also looks weak, and will continue to grow spindly.
The seed potato on the right hand side has been placed in a light frost free environment showing that the growth is dark & healthy.
You should have your seed potatoes chitting at the moment, check on them and see how there looking.
Blog created by Mark Burton (Allotment Secretary) / Content Mick Cooper Plot 12E



