hraaautumn2010.blogspot.com
Hill Rise Allotment Association Autumn 2010: Welcome to the Autumn 2010 newsletter
http://hraaautumn2010.blogspot.com/2010/10/welcome.html
Welcome to the Autumn 2010 newsletter. Our first full year as an allotment association has ended, topped off with our AGM on the 19th October. Thanks to everyone who turned up on a wet cold evening, it was much appreciated. But above all the show should be fun and I think I can honestly say it was one of the more enjoyable things we have done this year, certainly in terms of organising it. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Diary of a Produce Show. I'll name that bug in? Top 10 tucker training tips.
hraawinter2011.blogspot.com
Hill Rise Allotment Association Winter 2011: Storm the first prize with successful scones
http://hraawinter2011.blogspot.com/2011/01/storm-first-prize-with-successful.html
Storm the first prize with successful scones. In this year’s produce show on 3. September we’ve got a new class, and that’s a set recipe for scones. Now, why have a set recipe and why pick scones? A set recipe means everyone who enters has used exactly the same ingredients. You might imagine this would result in identical looking entries, but it rarely happens. A set recipe really tests the baking skills of the cook and so it is a technical challenge. The second question of ‘why scones? Over the next wee...
hraaautumn2010.blogspot.com
Hill Rise Allotment Association Autumn 2010: Can you name the bug?
http://hraaautumn2010.blogspot.com/2010/09/can-you-name-bug.html
Can you name the bug? Here are some insects commonly seen around allotments… if you look carefully enough. Can you name them? To see the answer highlight the section between the asterisks. If you see this you’ll think you’ve found something rare and exotic, and twenty years or more ago you’d have been right, but with warming climates this spectacular creature is becoming more common in southern England, emigrating in spring and autumn to and from southern Europe. Large and hairy, this insect is generally...
hraawinter2011.blogspot.com
Hill Rise Allotment Association Winter 2011: Book review
http://hraawinter2011.blogspot.com/2010/12/book-review.html
We were recently sent a book called "The Allotment Source Book" by Caroline Foley, to review. When I opened it I thought it was going to be a heavy on pictures and low on detail (although admittedly, they are good pictures). But as I read it, I did actually find some useful information which I had not come across before, like a section on allotment forestry. The Allotment Source Book. Price £20.00 ISBN 9781847736642 Hardback. The Allotment Source Book. Enter the discount code Hill. Offer valid until 31.
hraawinter2011.blogspot.com
Hill Rise Allotment Association Winter 2011: The Solanaceae Family
http://hraawinter2011.blogspot.com/2011/01/solanaceae-family.html
Although potatoes and deadly nightshade both have alkaloids and many alkaloids are highly poisonous, all the Solanaceae don’t necessarily have the same alkaloids. Atropa belladonna. Deadly nightshade) is poisonous because of the alkaloid atropine which is a tropane alkaloid and although it is highly poisonous it is also a very useful drug. Many species in the solanaceae family have atropine and other tropane alkaloids in their stems and leaves including the ones that we cultivate for food. For a fuller e...
hraawinter2011.blogspot.com
Hill Rise Allotment Association Winter 2011: Guess the vegetable
http://hraawinter2011.blogspot.com/2011/01/guess-vegetable.html
Can you guess which vegetable the following describes (the image isn’t meant to give you. To reveal the answer highlight the section between the asterisks here * CARROT. And then click here. To go to an unusual recipe using the mystery veg. This vegetables is…. Used by Mrs Beeton to make a mock apricot jam. Used as a cake ingredient in the present day. A principle ingredient in Mrs Beeton 'baked or boiled … pudding'. The subject of an online museum. Available in different colours! Couldn't give a fig?
hraaspring2011.blogspot.com
Hill Rise Allotment Association: Grandpa’s theory
http://hraaspring2011.blogspot.com/2011/04/grandpas-theory.html
Hill Rise Allotment Association. St Ives Gardening Club. Remember when for tea at night, it was meat and spuds to start,. With maybe carrots, cauli and some peas, but nothing a la Carte. Then for pudding there’d be custard or some jelly with ice cream,. But rarely anything with chocolate or plum pudding it would seem. And then on chilly winter nights, there’d be Mum’s veggie soup,. Or porridge on those frosty morns that gleefully we’d scoop. But how the times have changed from those homely meals a treat,.
hraaspring2011.blogspot.com
Hill Rise Allotment Association: Using green waste compost
http://hraaspring2011.blogspot.com/2011/03/using-green-waste-compost.html
Hill Rise Allotment Association. St Ives Gardening Club. Using green waste compost. However there are a few things which need to be known, if you are to avoid problems using green waste compost on the allotment or in the garden. In short, the rules are:. Don't try germinating seeds directly in it. Mix it well with soil , no more than one third green waste compost to two thirds. Soil, before growing plants in it. That really is all you need to know, but here is a bit more technical information. Well, that...
hraaspring2011.blogspot.com
Hill Rise Allotment Association: Top articles from the Winter newsletter
http://hraaspring2011.blogspot.com/2011/03/top-articles-for-winter-newsletter.html
Hill Rise Allotment Association. St Ives Gardening Club. Top articles from the Winter newsletter. Any ideas which were the ten most read topics from the last newsletter? For all you budding authors just itching to get an article in for the Summer newsletter (deadline end of July, but don’t let that stop you getting all creative early! And want a clue on what’s popular, here’s the ranking. Just click on an entry to read again. Article (click to access page). Meet the solanaceae family.