Growing our wedding

We are both really enjoying our garden and have spent every spare moment in it this year, so when it came to thinking about our wedding it seemed like a natural decision to make our garden part of it.

So – we’re growing our decorations…

We’re using an autumn harvest theme, so we’re growing colourful popcorn, gourds, squash pumpkins, some sunflowers (maybe?!) and we’re also planning to use apples, leaves and berries from around the garden.

Fingers crossed that everything is ripe at the right time!

Pop-stars!

Before you read this blog, here is some music to go with it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DBYjZTdrJlA

Right, now you’re in the mood, lets talk popcorn. I have to admit, this is another James Wong suggestion, and one that I am loving so far.

We planted our popcorn seeds in toilet rolls – they don’t like their roots disturbed so when you plant them out you can plant the whole toilet roll and it will biodegrade. Just like the biodegradable plant pots you can get in the garden centre but free from the bathroom instead.

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These seeds grew so quickly, it was six days before they’d all popped up, and another week before they looked pretty strong. When we planted them out we probably planted them too close together, but we have been giving them a comfrey feed once a week and they have shot up, nice and tall and strong.

Our neighbour Mike is growing sweetcorn (as are most of the farmers around us) and it looks almost the same – the main difference is that ours is deep russet red around the tips of the leaves and on the forming husks, unlike the golden yellow of the sweetcorn.

Popcorn husks are very colourful, usually a mixture of reds, yellows, oranges and browns. We’re planning to use the popcorn as decoration at the wedding, I’ve bought some screw eyes to fix in the ends of them and we plan to make colourful autumn harvest bunting with them!

If you want to eat them though, all you have to do is brush butter on the outside of the husk and pop it in the microwave whole. I can’t wait for our winter film nights!

 

To bee or not to bee

That is indeed a good question. We decided against chickens as there is a healthy local fox population, we’re rarely home in time to shut them up before dark in the winter and didn’t really want to confine them to a run. However bees, while still needing a lot of work, don’t need shutting in at night and we both love honey.

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We’ve also both been following all of the news about declining bee populations and we’re keen to fill our garden with bee-friendly plants and spaces. Keeping a hive of bees seems a natural next step.

I’ve been in touch with Bath Beekeepers Association and we’re hoping to get to one of their introductory courses next spring. We’re also researching how to plant our garden up for bees next year. In the meantime we’re reading as much as we can and learning a huge amount. Any advice, experiences or resources you can share with us would be much appreciated!

Our garden forks – an obituary

Our garden forks have both died at a far too young age. During their lives both worked hard, turned the earth, dug the ground. Both strove for perfection in tilling soil. Both met an untimely demise at the hands of unskilled labourers.

Goodbye fine forks, you served us well.

P.s. David wanted to name this post Fork off.

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Hen house flies the coop

After a (very brief) discussion David and I decided that we didn’t want to keep hens, so would get rid of the hen house and run we found when we uncovered the back garden!

The upside of this was that the hen house itself was pretty rotten, so it broke apart easily when my friend Laura attacked it with a hammer! The downside? Well a million tonne stone sink buried in the ground as a water trough took the two of us hours to remove, and there was a lot of chicken poo involved…

Also it rained. There is nothing like standing in chicken poo, getting freezing cold, digging up something that would be too heavy for you to lift even if it weren’t buried in the mud, in the rain.

However, we’re now done, the chicken run is no more and we have to decide what to do with the space. We’ve been thinking about turning it into a veg patch for this year in case we don’t get time to sort raised beds in the back of the garden – what do you think?