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Looking forward to April in the garden

3/28/2017

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At this time of year:
Spring is here. More and more flowers are appearing everywhere. Trees are blossoming and every gardener is filled with great hopes and optimism for the new growing season. Look out for the wild garlic we planted in the woodland alongside the path by the Wyresdale Road entrance. Wild garlic is a great ingredient in the kitchen. Add it at the last minute to many dishes (omelettes, pasta sauces, liven up other vegetables, etc.) to get a great garlic flavour. Or you can make pesto with wild garlic, parmesan cheese, pine nuts and olive oil.

Next month’s activities:
Next month’s activities will include turning over the existing compost heaps and then mulching some of the beds with the compost at the bottom of the heaps, adding chicken manure pellets to the beds, making plant signs and starting off a new area for growing comfrey and New Zealand flax.

Want to get involved?
We normally meet up here at 10am upon the first Sunday of each month. Next month we will be meeting upon
Sunday April 2nd from 10am to 1pm.

We always welcome new volunteers for the gardening. However, if you aren't sure whether gardening is for you there are other ways that you could contribute to Scotch Quarry. You may want an outlet for your artistic side such as painting plant signs, making mosaics, making sculptures, writing poetry or making any other art installation you can think of for displaying in the garden? You may be a budding photographer and want to photograph the park through the seasons for a public show? You may have ideas for how the community garden, play area or the park can be improved? You may have ideas for events that could be put on? We always want ideas. You may want to bring cakes, biscuits or other refreshments along to keep our volunteers going on a Sunday morning gardening session? You may be a social media nut and would love to get Scotch Quarry a higher profile online? Maybe there is another way that makes use of your talents that I haven't listed to make Scotch Quarry even more beautiful? Let us know.

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Community fruit bush exchange

3/13/2017

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This Saturday, March 18th 1-2.30pm we're very pleased to be hosting a community fruit bush exchange in Scotch Quarry Park.
One of the joys of a community garden is that you discover how, with a minimum of effort and skill, it is really easy to make new plants for free. And that's exactly what we've been doing in Scotch Quarry over the past few years. As a result, our nursery bed is jam packed with plants - some of which we can use in the garden and some of which we just don't have space for. The good news is that, even if we can't use all the plants that we grow, other local gardens can make use of them. This Saturday, we're going to be teaming up with two other local community gardens, Christ Church Lancaster and the EcoHub up at the University, so that they can take all the fruit bushes that we no longer have room for in the garden. So it's an exciting time as our plant babies go on to loving new homes!
If you'd like to join us to help out in the great plant swap, you'll be very welcome. Here's to a fruitful summer in every sense of the word!
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Spring has sprung - almost!

3/5/2017

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Picture
We had our first gardening session of the spring today. The weather wasn't quite as lovely as yesterday but, compared to the deluge that the forecast had been predicting only the other day, it was perfectly fit for purpose - no rain to speak of at all, which was a definite bonus! We made good use of the time, finishing off the winter pruning (currants, jostaberries and gooseberries got their annual tidy up) and creating some hardwood cuttings in the process. Having discovered the art of taking cuttings just a few years ago, it has now become a compulsive habit with me and I can't imagine not making use of those bits of the plant that would otherwise be thrown away. It might be hard to believe that, in just a couple of years, these will be fully formed new plants, but a quick look at last year's 'babies' created by Alice using this very same process showed that the magical transformation is already underway - new buds bursting and they are raring to go. It is always lovely to be able to share the ease and speed of this with a new generation of helpers in the garden and this morning was no exception to that so huge thanks to all who came along and helped!

Other jobs successfully completed this morning include the mulching of the raised beds with our very own compost and the clearing away of last year's seed heads to the compost heap, with the exception of the sedum stems which we thought might make quite a nice 'bug hotel' thanks to their hollow stems. We might make this a fun activity for next year's March session, so watch this space!



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    Peter

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