Tuesday, 27 May 2014

Crochet Phone Cover

My mum bought a new phone last week and asked me to crochet her a phone case. My mum gave me a ball of 4 ply merino wool in baby pink, I used an Addi Ergonomic Swing Crochet Hook 2.5mm and a double crochet stitch throughout. I crocheted in a spiral that way I only had one end to stitch together. I stitched a lazy daisy flower on the front of the flap. using wool I bought at the Yarndale festival last year.



Allotment News and Views Part 2

This first photograph is of flowering sage, I did have this in a large pot for about four years but it was getting bigger and bigger and so I decided to transplant and let it spread it's roots a bit.


I have just dug over a space in front of the greenhouse, last year it was full of cornflowers this year I have decided to have it as a mint bed, there are four garden mint plants and one lambs mint. To the left of the mint bed is a row of golden marjoram.


I have one large border at the top of the allotment this is filled with a bay tree, cox apple tree, clematis, soapwort, phlox, bears grass, rose bushes, marjoram, black peppermint, geraniums, lemon balm and a large lovage plant.



I recently saw an offer on the Guardian website for twenty-four lavender plants and all I had to pay was £4.80 for postage. I received them two weeks later, they were lovely healthy plug plants and I have transplanted them to larger pots and they are all doing well, when they are large enough I am hoping to use them as a lavender hedge.


Today I also transplanted the Tamra slicing cucumber plants, instead of putting them in growbags, I decided to plant them in large tubs. I know a few people that have grown them this way and all of them have said they had produced a large crop. The black tubs I bought from Morrisons supermarket, ten for £1, they are florist tubs.


To finish off my photography for the day I have taken a few overall views of the allotment.




Monday, 26 May 2014

Allotment News and Views

I have realised I haven't taken very many photographs of my allotment this year, so this afternoon after I had finished planting I decided to take a few.

This first photograph is the view from my allotment, in the distance you can see Hoad Monument. The monument is a 100ft tower built on the top of Hoad Hill in Ulverston, it was built in 1850. It commemorates Sir John Barrow who was born in Ulverston in 1764, he was a founder member of the Royal Geographic Society. Hoad Monument is open to the public, I've attached a link to a leaflet from the Ulverston Council website which lists opening times and a detailed background on Sir John Barrow, here


The first raised bed has two different types of beans in so far, Minidor Yellow Dwarf French Bean and Aquadulce Longpod Broad Bean, I have grown all of these from seed. Unfortunately out of the eight broad bean plants I had grown from seed, only four survived.



The second bed belongs to my 4 year old nephew, he has planted a row of crispy lettuce, long and round carrots.


The next bed is full of white Sturon onions.


This is our latest allotment bed, it was full of old strawberry plants, which were not producing very many strawberries so we decided to get rid of them and sometime in the future we will be building two more raised beds especially for strawberries. In the meantime we dug and sieved the soil and dressed it with lime and two weeks later I planted Organic White Globe Turnip, Organic Rubine Brussels Sprouts, Green Brussels Sprouts, Cauliflower and Long Leaf Kale.


The big fern type plant is Sweet Cicely, I am loathe to dig this out as it smells fantastic in the summer, a lovely aniseed type smell, I have stewed rhubarb with a few of these leaves and have also used the seeds in homemade bread, so for the moment it's staying where it is.



At the side of the brassica bed, I have three very large red and green gooseberry bushes and a large blackcurrant bush, in front of these I have nine rhubarb crowns. The other side of the raised beds is a green gooseberry, two blackcurrant bushes, one redcurrant and one white currant bush. We also have two small cox's apple trees.



The next bed has three rows of Bright Lights Chard, three rows of Giant American Spinach, one row of Scarlet Globe Radish, one row each of Organic Rocket, Red and Green Salad Bowl Lettuce, Mizuna, Green Crispy Lettuce.


The last bed has two rows of Johnsons Boltard Beetroot, three rows of Chase Organic Detroit Globe Beetroot, three rows of Savoy Cabbage, and three rows of Pointed Cabbage.


The cabbage plants should really not be planted in with the Beetroot as this bed was going to be the 'fibrous' bed, but I ran out of space so they have had to go together.

There is one plant in the allotment I definitely would not like to be without and that is Soapwort, as it's name suggests it is a form of soap, take three or four leaves and rub them between your hands with a little bit of water and a green foam starts to happen, keep rubbing the leaves together and your hands soon become clean. Apparently the National Trust also use Soapwort to clean some of their old tapestries as modern detergent is too harsh. In the Summer Soapwort also produces small pale pink flowers which have a lovely delicate scent.


My one and only Rhodedenron. This is the only plant that was originally in the allotment when I took it over ten years ago, the rest of the allotment was like a field just full of couch grass and nothing else.

I still have a few other photographs to share but this will have to wait until tomorrow.

Friday, 16 May 2014

Kittens in the Allotment

My husband was in the allotment yesterday and heard a rustling behind one of our wood piles and noticed a cat with her two tiny kittens. We think she has given birth nearby and has been sheltering in the wood pile.


I have phoned the RSPCA and two of our local animal shelters but apparently they do not catch and take in feral cats. The three of them do look healthy enough, although the mother looks a little on the thin side. We have put some water out for them and I've noticed the mother lets them play in the allotment while she goes hunting. The allotment has a fence all around it and is secure, we have also put lids on all of our water butts. I guess when they are old enough they will move on, at the moment they are enjoying the sun and peace and quiet.

I managed to take a photo of one of the kittens, a ginger tabby, the other one is a grey tabby like her mother, the grey one is a little shy and was hiding.

Tuesday, 13 May 2014

Crochet Doily

I had a little bit of time on my hands this morning and thought I would crochet a little doily to go under my vase. The yarn was from my stash box and I have long lost the label for it, I know it is DK 100% cotton but other than that I'm at a total loss.

 

Another Fine Fest in Ulverston

When I visited my local wool shop called Loopy in Ulverston, the owner Andrea was asking for volunteers to knit or crochet any size squares or rectangles to yarn bomb Ulverston in time for one of the festivals called Another Fine Fest. Ulverston has a lot of festivals throughout the year, this particular festival is on Saturday 14th June and it is to celebrate the birthday of Stan Laurel who was born here in Ulverston. If you would like more information on the festival and everything that is going on that weekend, take time out to have a look at their Laurel and Hardy website.

Andrea is still asking for volunteers, you can pop into her shop or give her a ring on 01229 480080 or email her at andrea.loopy@hotmail.co.uk. Andrea also has a box of remnants of wool, if you ask her you can take some of that instead of using your own stash. I know all help is gratefully received.

Just a few balls of wool I took from Andrea's stash box.

 

Thursday, 8 May 2014

Nightmare - broken hook

A couple of weeks ago my Addi Swing Crochet Hook snapped, I was so upset, I love Addi Swing Hooks they are the best, they are so comfortable I don't end up with blisters on my hands after hours of crocheting.


I had my hook for just under a year, I bought it from a website in the UK, I won't state which one, I did contact them and explain it had snapped and asked if it had a guarantee as I had been told by a friend they have a year guarantee. The website contacted me back after over a week and said they had never heard of this and would look into it and I never heard from them again, not a good experience to be honest and I won't use them again.

I decided to contact the company direct, Addi are based in Germany. I received an extremely polite email within a matters of hours. They were sorry to hear that my hook had snapped and especially after only having it for under a year. Unfortunately there is no guarantee on the hooks in the UK, however the hooks in the USA have a lifetime guarantee. They asked me to email photographs that they could pass onto their manufacturers so they could make sure it did not happen again and they kindly sent me a new hook free of charge which I received in a matter of days. That is definitely what I call good customer service. Best of all I was able to finish crocheting my dog's third crochet blanket, she does love them, she wraps herself up in them like a little sausage roll. Thank you Addi.

Reuse, Recycle

I haven't been blogging for a while as I have been painting the outside of my house, which has been a massive job.

I did manage to crochet a little vase jacket for an empty Neom diffuser oil bottle using the yarn I bought from Loopy in Ulverston. The yarn is by a company called Puppets, the name of the yarn is Eldorado and the colour of the yarn is called Pale Aqua and it is 100% cotton, I used a 1.75 mm crochet hook and UK double crochet stitch throughout. I crocheted in a spiral and then the further up the bottle I got I reduced the stitches until it was snug around the neck of the bottle.

I cut some Lily of the Valley from my front garden, I love the fragrance it really is strong considering there are only four stems.