Uxbridge Gazette

Get growing and don’t lose the plot

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IN 1975 my husband had to wait 18 months before he got an allotment. Now there are allotments for the taking.

The plot we got was very, very overgrown and with the help of a weed destroying ‘flame thrower’, immense hard work on his part and verbal help and plant donations from other plot holders my husband got it growing wonderfull­y and was indeed the winner several times of the best allotment in Hillingdon.

With plots begging for takers a few of those who take one on, strip the top six to nine inches of topsoil along with the top weed layer, pile it at the end of the plot thus exposing the thick clay underneath.

Then they try to dig and cultivate this clay! Once they have done this many go away and return a couple of weeks later to see how their vegetables are growing only to find a verdant patch of weeds, as no grass and weed roots had been removed, interspers­ed with the odd hardy vegetable plant that had survived or if we have had a bit more rain than usual waterlogge­d soil or a shallow pond as the exposed clay will not let excess water seep away.

Some people had actually asked for advice which is ‘....get all of the weed roots out and don’t waste the topsoil by removing it and piling it up at the end of the plot.....’ This advice is not taken onboard and now we have overgrown, shallow ponds all over our site as our newcomers knew it all and have now given up.

Which is a great shame as they had worked hard to begin with.

Now, what few plot owners are left are also giving up after a disastrous winter, spring and summer. I feel that this time next year we may be the only plot owners left and that this site will be sold off for building. Then, there may be an outcry about the lack of allotments available.

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