January 26th, 2011
Amberley Allotments allows you to reinvent the skills of your forefathers through growing your own vegetables, fruit and flowers. The other idea behind setting up Amberley Allotments was, besides growing your own, to create a community where people exchange seeds, plants and advice and a have a bit of craic! Amberley Allotments are situated in Rochestown and are convenient to everyone who lives at that side of the Cork city.
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Tags: Amberley, Amberley Allotments, Brian Ludgate, Carrigaline, Co Cork, Cork City, Douglas, Dunsland Garden Centre, exchange seeds, flowers, Fruit, landscape contractor, Ludgate Lanscapes, manured, Monkstown, Peter Dowdall, plot cultivated, Rochestown, Rochestown College, Sue Ludgate, vegetables, windbreak
Posted in Cork allotments, Uncategorized | No Comments »
January 25th, 2011
A family-run allotment scheme set on a small farm only a few miles from Ballybunion. Join Joe, Lucy, their four daughters, and a host of cattle and ponies in the peaceful countryside as you grow your own veg.
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Tags: 12 metres x 6 metres, allotment scheme, Ballybunion, BALLYCONRY, basic gardening tuition, cattle, Co. Kerry, countryside, DROMERIN, Gurtcreen, Gurtcreen allotments, insurance, Kerry, Listowel, Listowel allotments, ponies, small farm, trantsplants.com, veg, €250
Posted in Kerry allotments, Uncategorized | No Comments »
June 6th, 2010
When is a turnip not a turnip? When it’s a swede, of course.
What we Irish commonly refer to as a turnip is actually a Swedish turnip or swede for short. Go and ask for a turnip in England, Wales, Australia or New Zealand and you will be handed a vegetable somewhere in size between a golf ball and a tennis ball. These are the true “turnips” with white flesh rather than the yellow of our Swedish turnip.
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Tags: Best Of All, Black Rot, Boron deficiency, boron Swedes, Brassica napobrassica, brassica-family, caterpillar damage, cattle turnip, Clubroot, coleslaw, Cutworms, Downy mildew, Flea beetle, fodder turnip, hairy green leaves Marian, Helenor, Invitation, neep, Powdery mildew, purple-topped swede, root ram, Ruby, rutabaga, Scandinavia, Slugs, snadgies, Soft rot, steamed greens, summer turnip, Swede, swede cook, swede Cooking, swede Diseases, Swede greens, Swede Midge, swede Pests, swede ph, swede plant, swede sow, Swede turnip, Swedes harvest, Swedes harvesting, Swedes storing, Swedish turnip, sweeten with frost, Turnip mosaic virus, Wilhelmsburger, winter swede, yellow turnip
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April 4th, 2010
Sweet corn is mistakenly regarded as a “no-grow” in Ireland. Many gardeners view it as a semi-tropical vegetable, one that requires intense sunlight and heat to crop, not to mention ripen. This is no longer true, and let me show you why.
The traditional varieties of sweet corn took a long time in the sun to mature and because of this were virtually guaranteed to disappoint over the Irish “summer”. This all changed when along came the F1 Hybrid seed varieties, sweet corn created through selective breeding. The F1 Hybrid varieties are early to mature making them much more reliable.
Check them out….
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Tags: baby corn, barbeque Sweet corn, boil Sweet corn, check ripeness Sweet corn, cob, Cooking Sweet corn, Corn smut Sweet corn, cornsilk, dried blood fertiliser, Early maturing sweet corn, Earlybird sweet corn, F1 Hybrid seed varieties, fertilizer Sweet corn, Food Sweet corn, freeze Sweet corn, Frit fly Sweet corn, greenhouse Sweet corn, Harvesting Sweet corn, How to plant Sweet corn, indian corn, kernels, Minipop sweet corn, Miracle sweet corn, nitrogen fertiliser Sweet corn, organic feed Sweet corn, pole corn, polytunnel Sweet corn, semi-tropical vegetable, soak your sweet corn seeds, soil conditions Sweet corn, sow Sweet corn, sow Sweet corn indoors, Storage Sweet corn, sugar corn, Sundance sweet corn, supersweet sweet corn, sweet corn F1 Hybrid, Sweet corn Ireland, Sweet corn pH, Sweet corn plant, Sweet corn seedlings, sweet corn seeds, Sweet corn window-sill, Sweetcorn, Swift sweet corn, Tendersweet sweet corn, traditional varieties sweet corn, When to grow Sweet corn, Where to grow Sweet corn, wind pollination Sweet corn, Zea mays
Posted in Growing guides., Uncategorized | 1 Comment »
March 28th, 2010
If you’re anything like me you love sowing seeds. It’s a true gardeners delight to raise a plant from a seemingly lifeless husk right through to the point where it blooms, becomes edible or produces fruit. This is what horticulture is all about, whether raising summer bedding for your colourful designs or perhaps growing vegetables to yourself and your family.
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Tags: compost disinfectant, disinfectant, homemade pots, Jeyes fluid, mould spores, old compost, Plants stunted, seed sowing pots, seed starter pots, seed trays, seeds on windowsills, small pots, sowing seeds, tap-rooted vegetables, Toilet roll insert, toilet roll insert pots, toilet roll pots, transplant shock, warm windowsill, wick water
Posted in Uncategorized, Vegetable garden tips and advice. | 4 Comments »
March 17th, 2010
A family-run business dedicated to providing high quality allotments to people living in and around the Galway area. Galway bay allotments have plots of land available on a peaceful and secure site. A piece of organic life only minutes from Galway City.
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Tags: allotment membership, Allotments, Clarinbridge, Clarinbridge village, Co. Galway, family-run business, Flint Walter, Galway area allotments, Galway Bay, Galway bay allotments, Gortard, N18, Oranmore, orchard area, Tea making facilities, €30 per month
Posted in Galway allotments, Uncategorized | No Comments »
March 16th, 2010
Selecting an Allotment plot?
Here are a few guidelines to help you out.
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Tags: Artificial shelter, aspect, Bindweed, Bishop Weed, Couch grass, direction of slope, Easterly aspect, Gout weed, loam soil, Nettles, Northerly aspect, Scutch grass, Selecting an Allotment, shelter, Southerly aspect, test for drainage, Westerly aspect, While Nettles
Posted in Uncategorized, Vegetable garden tips and advice., Wicklow allotments | No Comments »
March 14th, 2010
Broad beans, one of the earliest garden beans to harvest, are a must for all vegetable gardeners. Not only do they produce crops of great benefit to the kitchen, they also add fragrance to the garden through their white-and-black coloured flowers. A staple food of the Roman legionnaire, the powerful Roman army marched on with a belly full of these beans. Maybe you should too.
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Tags: Aquadulce, bean pods, bell bean, Black bean aphid, broad beans, Bunyard’s Exhibition, chocolate spot, dwarf broad bean, faba Bean, Fava bean, field bean, fragrance, garden beans, horsebean, Imperial Green Longpod, Masterpiece Longpod, Red Epicure, Scotch bean, staking broad beans, supporting broad beans, The Sutton, tic bean, Vicia faba, Windsor bean
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February 28th, 2010
The nation is split on parsnips. On one side you have, let’s call them the parsnip-phobes, the group who believe this vegetable to be nothing but the basis for a bland soggy mash. Then on the other side you have the parsnip-philes who view them as a easy grow vegetable, one which will add a warm nutty flavour to stews or conversely bring forth sweetness when roasted.
Where do you stand on the issue? Well, to truly test yourself you should try you hand at growing your own. Once you bring them fresh from garden to table you may see a whole different side to humble parsnip.
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Tags: Avonresister, carrots, Celery, cloches, cooking parsnips, easy to grow once, Forked parsley, forked parsnips, Gladiator, Hollow Crown Improved, Malformed parsnips, March, May, Mediterranean, nutmeg, Offenham, Parsnip, parsnip canker, parsnip for shallow soils, parsnips, Pastinaca sativa, resistance to canker, roasted, stews, sweet parsnips, Tender and True, The Student, Umbelliferae, vegetable, White Gem
Posted in Growing guides., Uncategorized | 2 Comments »
February 23rd, 2010
Need a garden query resolved or want to read numerous enlightening and image filled horticulture related articles?
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Tags: allotment bulletin board, allotment discussion board, allotment forum, allotment growing forum, garden blogs, garden bulletin board, garden discussion, garden discussion board, garden help, garden ireland, garden.ie, gardening articles, gardening.ie, Irish gardeners forum, tree and shrub forum, vegetable forum
Posted in Allotment news from Ireland., Uncategorized | No Comments »