Thursday, 27 October 2016

Endings and Beginnings

It is no use pretending any longer; summer has stolen away; autumn has sidled in and winter is waiting in the wings to steal the show.

The mornings are dark when I awake and yesterday as I stripped the old runner beans from their poles, there was a sharp wind with a cold edge blowing from the east; the same wind that is following me across the field to shut up the ducks and the chickens for the night. It is only quarter past six but heavy, grey night clouds have darkened the east, and are gathering their forces against the clear band of silver light still lying along the top of the hill to the west. The air is full of raucous cries as the rooks lift into the sky, turn against the gathering darkness and sweep towards their night roost in the woodland at the top of the hill. Then all is silent save for the plaintive quack of one of my ducks waiting for its supper. My waddling friends don’t argue. Once I place the feed hopper inside they dutifully follow each other into their shed. By the time I secure the electric fence around the chicken run it is dark. I call my dog and head down, collar up, I am glad to be heading home where a warm, bright kitchen and the smell of supper awaits me. Gone are the warm evenings when I lingered to watch the swallows fill the evening sky, and waited for the first glimpse of a bat through the trees as dusk fell. 

The allotment looks forlorn. The apple trees are bare; their fruit is carefully packed into boxes in the store shed and only a few windfalls are left for the squirrels. The squashes have been lifted, hardened and are also in store and all that is left is a bare patch of grey earth and a rash of new young stinging nettles in one corner. The large, green umbrella leaves of the rhubarb have collapsed and their rotting remains lay spread eagled across the flinty soil. In the greenhouse, the last tomatoes hang on shrivelled stems to ripen slowly until the first frost.

The end of the season. Time to hang up the fork and the hoe and burrow down indoors in the warm.

But that is not the way things work. Because this is where next year starts. It is a time for new plans, new ideas, and lots of hard work preparing the ground (literally) for new beginnings. It is wellies on, gloves at the ready, scarf tucked in, a jar of hot chocolate on the shelf in the veg shed, and down to work while the weather holds.

I have already sown broad beans, and onion sets outside and in the polytunnel late salad leaves, winter lettuce, coriander, parsley and rocket are showing their heads. There are carrots in tubs which will hopefully survive the winter and this week I split open a packet of winter peas, soaked them in paraffin to deter the mice and carefully dropped the small wrinkled seeds into shallow drills in the dark, still warm earth in the hope of an early crop next year. Hidden at the back of the potting cupboard is a roll of horticultural bubble wrap waiting to be used if it turns cold. 

And now it’s into the manure heap with the wheel barrow. Steam gently rises in the cool air as I shovel in the dung and trundle it along to the beds I have cleared ready for digging. There is something special about the smell of damp earth as it is turned with the spade; freshness and decay rolled into one. Equally, there is something seriously satisfying about digging; a sense of achievement as a messy patch of weeds morphs into crumbly carefully tilled soil. Or is it a masochistic streak buried deep that just enjoys the exercise? I try to do less each year to protect the soil structure and I have come around to the idea of permaculture and green manure but tucked inside I am my father’s daughter and he believed in digging.

And the digging gives me time to plan and to dream of all the things that I am going to do next spring. The vegetables I am going to squeeze into this plot, the drip feed, self-watering system I am going to work out how to use next year, the sacrificial flowers I am going to plant between the vegetables to deter ravenous insects from eating my crops, the beautiful scarecrow I am going to make, the ornamental bed of cut flowers I am going to grow, and so it goes on.

Just a few more weeks of hard work if the weather is kind and the allotment should be put to bed, clean and tidy, ready and waiting to begin again. Then I can retreat indoors.

Roll on the spring!

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