Tuesday

Ten Good Reasons to Grow a Green Manure Crop!



1 They're cheap and easy to grow.
2 A packet of green manure seeds is easy to carry home - unlike a large sack of animal manure!
3 They can increase soil fertility.
4 They improve soil structure and help prevent soil erosion.
5 They encourage efficient use of land. So why not grow a green manure crop on your unused land this winter?
6 Most green manure crops are very attractive to wildlife.
7 Bare soil encourages weed growth, so green manure bare ground to keep weeds in check.
8 By taking up nutrients from the soil, green manure crops prevent them from being washed away when it rains.
9 Some green manure plants (legumes) are nitrogen fixers.
10 Green manuring increases the humus content of the soil.


How does Green Manuring Work?
Traditionally, green manure crops are sown and allowed to grow, either until the land is needed again or until the plants have reached a certain growth stage. At this point, they are cut down, dug in to the soil and are left to decompose, releasing vital plant nutrients back into the soil which are then used by the next crop. Obviously, if you are using strict no-dig, veganic gardening methods, then digging the crop into the soil is not really an option.
But if you don't want to dig, then green manure crops can also be composted or used as a mulching material instead.

Thursday

SOW & GROW NOW



Winter purslane
Cornsalad
Red frills mustard
Chinese leaf,

Tatsoi Red
Russian Kale
Spring green cabbage
Calabrese Spring onions
Land cress
Giant red mustard
Mizuna
Broad beans

Cavolo Nero
Winter green cabbage
Carrots

Sunday

A SPLASH OF NETTLES AND A DOLLOP OF COMFREY



Having a patch of nettles and comfrey will have many benefits to your garden or allotment, not only is the stinging nettle one of the most important native plants for wildlife in the UK.
The nettle supports over 40 species of insect including some of our most colourful butterflies.

Comfrey has become an important plant for the organic gardening movement. It has thick, far reaching roots which access minerals deep in the soil, making it rich in potassium and nitrogen. The fast-growing leaves can be cut several times a year to make an organic slug control, liquid fertiliser, leaf mould and compost activator. Comfrey has long been associated with herbal medicines and there is no doubt that it can be effective in the treatment of sprains and bruises. Many people use it to ease the pain of arthritic joints and the roots mashed into a paste may help to heal wounds.
Comfrey also benefits many willdife creatures which are important to crop pollination.

Natural leaf-based fertilizer involves putting comfrey and nettle leaves into a container. Fill it with water and cover it. It has a strong odor, so you may want to store it outdoors. To use it as fertilizer, dilute it with one part mixture and 20 parts water. Depending on what you’re growing, different ingredients will add nutrients to this mixture. For example, tea leaves add nitrogen and manganese and alfalfa will add numerous amounts of nutrients and minerals.

Organic slug & snail remedy



Problems with slugs and snails eating your plants? Get two bulbs of garlic, and smoosh them with a rolling pin...take out your frustration on them. Put them in 2 pints of water, and simmer for one hour. Let the liquid cool, and strain into a container. Use one tablespoon of the liquid to one gallon of water. One use of this is supposed to be sufficient, but I use it maybe every two months. Use it on any plant that is suseptible to slug attack. Good luck.

Friday

Gardens Giving Special offers to Garden organic members

In additon to Ryton and English Heritage Audley End
members get discount or free entry to the following gardens
with membership card.


Berkshire
Waltham Palace Farm
Open May -Sept
Offer 2 for1
http://www.walthamplace.com/welcome.php?section=diary

Chesire
Arley Hall & Gardens
open tue to Sun
offer 2 for 1
http://www.arleyhallandgardens.com/

Cumbria
Brantwood
Mid March to Mid Nov
offer 2 for 1


Former home of John Ruskin. Brantwood is the most beautifully situated house in the Lake District

Devon
RHS Garden Rosemoor
Free admission
http://www.rhs.org.uk/whatson/gardens/rosemoor/index.asp

Clovelly Court Garden
1March -30th Oct

Free admission
http://www.britainsfinest.co.uk/gardens/gardens.cfm/searchazref/810011013651

Essex
RHS Garden Hyde Hall
Members + guest free
http://www.rhs.org.uk/WhatsOn/Gardens/

Gloucestershire
Owlpen Manor Estate
May - Sept
Free admission
http://www.owlpen.com/

Kent Brogdale Horticultural trust
open winter
Free admission
http://www.brogdale.org/

Godinton House and Gardens

Free admission
http://www.godinton-house-gardens.co.uk/

Bedgebury National Pinetum
winter & summer
Fee admission
http://www.bedgeburypinetum.org.uk/

Leicestershire
Belvoir Castle
April to 30 Sept
offer 2 for 1
http://www.belvoircastle.com/thegardens.asp

Lincolnshire
Normanby Hall & Country Park
Open Daily
Free admisson
http://www.aboutbritain.com/NormanbyHallCountryPark.htm

Ruthland
Barnsdale Gardens
Free admission
http://www.barnsdalegardens.co.uk/

Surrey
RHS Wisley
open all year
Free admission
http://www.rhs.org.uk/whatson/gardens/wisley/index.asp

Losley park
Guildford

May - Sept
Free admission
http://www.loseley-park.com/

West midlands
Birmingham Botanical Gardens
Open every day
Free admisson
http://www.birminghambotanicalgardens.org.uk/

West Sussex
West Dean Gardens
Chichester
March _ Oct
Offer 2 for 1
http://www.westdean.org.uk/site/gardens/

Yorkshire
RHS Garden Harlow Carr
Harrogate
open All year
Free admission
www.rhs.org.uk/harlowcarr

Ripley Castle Gardens
Harrogate
Open all year
Free admision
http://www.ripleycastle.co.uk/

Kew at Castle Howard
Aboretum Trust
York
March - Nov
Free admission
http://www.kewatch.co.uk/

Tuesday

Compost hints & tips


Love Your Leaves
Now is the time to start collecting your leaves .
It's easy to turn your fallen leaves into nutrient rich leaf mulch. Leaf mulch is a dark brown, pleasant smelling, crumbly material that makes an excellent soil improver and lawn conditioner. It can also be used in seed and potting mixes.
Making leaf mulch is easy...
STEP 1:
Use a bin liner, old gardening bag or
FREE brown bags from Soutwark council available in your local libary or call us.
STEP 2:
Fill up your leaf mulch bag with leaves
STEP 3:
Leave your bag in an out-of-the-way place in your garden for about a year. By then you will have a bag of leaf mulch that is ready to use.
Grass mowings
Mix well with browns to avoid a slimy mess. Alternatively, leave on the lawn whenever possible - they will soon disappear and feed the grass; this will not cause 'thatch'. Can also be mixed into a leafmould heap, or used directly as a soil mulch.

What can you compost at home?
The key to a healthy compost heap is to keep a good mix of green and brown materials, and stir regularly. There are lots of everyday items that you can add to your compost such as:
Grass clippings
Shredded prunings
Garden prunings
Cereal boxes
Nettles
Toilet & kitchen roll tubes
Tea bags
Egg boxes
Young annual weeds (e.g.chickweed & speedwell)
Ashes from wood, paper or lumpwood charcoal
Fruit & vegetable peelings
Tumble dryer lint (from natural fibre clothes)
Old flowers
Corn cobs and stalks
Ground coffee & filter paper
Cotton threads
Pond algae & seaweed (in moderation)
Torn up cardboard
Weeds
Wool
Spent bedding plants
String (made from natural fibres)
Comfrey leaves
Egg shells
Rhubarb leaves
Pine needles and cones (slow to compost so don't put too much in)
Old natural fibres (e.g. woolly jumpers or cotton t-shirts cut into small pieces)
Dry leaves, twigs and hedge clippings
Newspaper (scrunched up)
Shredded paper
Woody clippings
Garden prunings
Feathers
Tissues, paper towels and napkins (unless they have been in contact with meat, fats, oils or disease)

Wednesday

How to get Started


Improve your soil by digging in leaf mould or garden compost.
Make your own compost by recycling vegetable peelings, tea bags and plant prunings.
Prevent weeds from growing by spreading a blanket of composted bark across the surface of bare soil.
Choose naturally pest and disease resistant varieties of vegetables and fruit.
Make your garden a haven for wildlife and beneficial insects and animals will control many pests for you including slugs, greenfly and snails.
Use biological controls to control many pest problems in the garden or greenhouse.
Accept a degree of imperfection and you'll learn to live without fertilisers and pesticides.
Stressed plants are vulnerable to disease, so keep them well watered.
Try
companion planting - strongly scented flowers are planted next to edible crops to deter pests.
Regular inspection of your garden and plants will help to prevent problems from getting out of hand

welcome

Welcome to a new garden organic group in south London

What's it all about?
If you are interested in growing food and beautiful flowers without using non-renewable resources, without polluting the environment and without killing wildlife then Organic Gardening is for you.

Our aims are to:
Encourage participation in Organic gardening
Share and exchange ideas through meetings• Provide advice• Organise visits to places of interest
Social EventsThese range from allotment/garden barbecues, to plant and seed swaps.

Why join?
By joining the South London Gardening Organic Group, you can meet like minded gardeners, share your experience with others, learn more and have fun!If you'd like to get involved in the group please email: slgardenorganic@gmail.com