Water Butts |
Back to England and their overwhelming preoccupation with growing things. I imagine I have already touched on the question of allotments, which are really nothing more than community gardens with a long history. Back even to Saxon times there has been a history of land being held in common for the production of food stuffs. At various times over this 1000 year period the common land has been confiscated or seized and incorporated into the holdings of nobles, the crown or even the church. The very first mention of an allotment is in Elizabethan England when an allotment of land was attached to tenant cottages for the growing of food and keeping of animals. If you weren't a "tenant" guess you had a problem since common land for the use of the poor was increasingly being enclosed.
Peek a boo pumpkin |
Life went on, the ability to keep your own plot rose and fell as the the towns became larger and the agrarian lifestyle gave way to the Industrial Revolution. In 1887, the Victorians, who were noteworthy for their interest in doing something to change the conditions of the poor city dwellers, albeit not generally very successfully, enacted the Cottage Gardens and Compensation for Crops Act. The intent was to compel the local authorities to provide allotments for the production of food it there was a demand for them . Naturally enough this was not terribly successful,. What would you rather see, a rag tag lot of poor folk struggling to grow a garden or a new tastefully designed building. Perhaps this was among the first acts of NIMBYism (Not In My Back Yard). And let's be honest, were they more interested in providing land to grow crops or was it the Victorian perspective that idle hands are the devils workshop. If you are busy tending turnips and brussel sprouts perhaps you would be saved from the evils of drink, while providing healthful and nourishing food for your family.
During both the First and Second World Wars the British coast was blockaded and food shortages were the norm. Rationing, which lasted until 1954 (ask Mick, he though a banana or an orange was something truly exotic) was a real and ongoing condition. The Victory Garden whether it was on your land or a communal allotment supplied significant food allowing the farmers to be a part of the war effort. And so it is, the allotment exists still in the year 2012.
Wheelbarrow in the garden |
What do they grow, you would be amazed. Roger, with whom we spoke fairly regularly, had potatoes, onions, leeks, greens, scarlet runner beans, strawberries, brussel sprouts, rhubarb, cabbage (multiple kinds) and lord only knows what else. One of the corners where the path went through the gardens had an
Poppy bud |
Looks like an artichoke(?) |
Hostas perhaps |
Enough now of gardens and gardening, what about those garden centres. You need some mulch or compost or a few new landscape plants, a quick trip to Home Depot or your local big box should take care of things. If you are really looking for a specimen plant or something a little out of the ordinary you might even make the trip to your local nursery. In an around Groby I can't think of a single shop, big box or small local, that sells anything gardening. You MUST go to the Garden Centre. Actually, I guess I do exaggerate a little, there were a couple of small nurseries, probably the size a the garden section in your average Home Depot in the area. But if you really needed a gardening trip you made the pilgrimage to one of the Garden Centres.
The one with which I am most familiar was on the way to Market Bosworth, several miles from nowhere and down a country lane. The indoor portion was the size of a Home Depot store. Over and above the indoor there were rows and rows of greenhouses, an enormous outdoor section under a mesh like cover, (too keep the sun out?) and a whole big display of garden sheds.
Pretty Pink Flower |
The garden sheds were totally fascinating. I am accustomed to those brown Rubbermaid plastic boxes with doors that look a bit like your Mother's Tupperware on super steroids. We even own metal 4x6 box with a corrugated roof and sliding door down in Redwood City for storing tools and plant pots. But my oh my something so plebeian as a Rubbermaid box will never do. I reckon some of the ones I saw on display were big enough to live in. Not only were they sizable but they were "architectural". Windows and doors, dormers and flower boxes, porches for sitting, attached boot scrapers for your muddy boots, built in cabinets and hooks for hanging your wet weather gear, special doodads for hanging your various tools; it was all there.
Trellis and Flowers |
This place was a shopping centre all by itself. Plant pots, compost, gardening clothes . . . you must have a sun hat ( to go with your assorted gardening gloves). God forbid you tie up the four corners of your hankie a la Monty Python. There was rope and twine and scissor and tools, rubber boots stylin' and not so stylin', potted plants, bare root plants, seeds and tubers, plants and liners and paraphernalia for water gardens and, and, and, it just goes on and on. Now, just in case you become a little over awed and/or exhausted with your shopping experience you may need to take a tea break. Wonder of wonders, what was right there on the premises but a rather sizable cafeteria offering everything from tea and scones to hot cooked midday meals.
Carolyn's Beans |
A small sweet shop where I was able to purchase Humbugs and a kitchen supply store completed the selection.
So here it is ladies and gentlemen. I cannot be bothered to proof this any further so you get it bad punctuation and all. Did allow spell check to have a go and got all my American spelling corrected . . . motorized with an "s"? You may have to wait for another edition, I believe I have run out of things English to share, but there is always Ashland. Thanks for coming along for the ride and I hope to hear from all of you soon. It would be nice to know who has been reading my blog, I can tell how many hits I get but not from whence they come. So if you think of it drop me a line (gaylef8@gmail.com) and let me know you have been following my tales of all things English.
Daisy |
Sunflower |
Coos aka Cows |
ttfn (ta ta for now) and all my love Gayle
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