This time in 2010, I was considering taking voluntary redundancy. I'm glad I did; I could never have imagined how good my course at Reaseheath would be, and certainly had no idea that I would have the opportunity to work on the building of a large show garden at RHS Tatton Park, and then to discuss it with visitors to the show. Definitely the horticultural highlight of the year.
"The Secret Garden" by Reaseheath College |
The build team (those present on the last day before judging) |
At home, the garden and allotment emerged quickly from a freezing winter to a warm spring, but we seemed to get the only rain for miles around through the summer. While everyone else fretted about drought, I regularly tipped an inch or so out of the rain gauge every couple of days. We did really well for salad leaves and got the best potato harvest ever, short on slug damage even to the Highland Burgundy Reds. The tomatoes were good, once they got going, the squashes and pumpkins reasonable considering the lack of summer sunshine, and the onions excellent. As usual, the carrots were a waste of space.
Onion crop drying in our allotment shed |
The fruit crop was amazing - a fair bit of the soft fruit went to feed the two broods of blackbirds, but we had more top fruit than we could handle. The freezer is still full of frozen plums (especially the Oolins Orange, which cropped well for the first time ever due to mild weather at flowering time), and I was even able to sell the excess pears, though with hindsight I suspect I may have made more money selling them from the front gate with an "honesty box" than via the farm shop. Lesson learned!
There were flowers too - the front garden looked good until the poppies faded, but hopefully next year the perennials will have filled out a bit and there will be more autumn colour.
Then the decision to go "self-employed". The business plan for this year is essentially "don't actually lose any money"! At least I know - after Kevin's garden - that I need not be afraid of quite overgrown sites. New adverts will go up in the local shops next week, and maybe I'll get a few customers. I have a veg garden project to do with some other former work friends and some likely venues for car boot sales of herbs (definitely not back to the farm shop with them!), and my second set of RHS level 2 exams in February.
Happy 2012!