Archive of ‘Filming’ category

The Allotment Kitchen

Around a month ago in one in my previous videos I mentioned an idea to make a cooking program where I share recipes and cook produce grown in my allotment. So this video is my little experiment, obviously the cooking series will be a little better filmed. I will set my little oven up outside and have a better script too :)

But in the mean time I just wanted to share some cordial recipes using foraged sloe berries and cherry plums.

Cooking on Plot 15C

The weekends usually consist of one whole day being spent up the allotment, I just love being there, It’s my favourite place and I can’t think of anything else I’d rather being doing! After a full week at work it’s nice to cycle up to Plot 15C in the morning with a long list of jobs to complete to spend the day in the sun shine weeding and harvesting crops (and remembering to put on suncream and a hat!) This weekend it just so happened to be a glorious day on Sunday (and poured with rain on Saturday!) so I headed to the allotment to do some much needed weeding. As a little treat I stopped at the local shop on the way to buy some supplies for lunch, both me and my Dad were spending the day on our plots so I decided to make us some lunch up the allotment.

I absolutely love my Ghillie Kettle, it makes the most delicious cups of tea and it’s so easy to use (once you get the hang of it!) You can also cook on it using the top of the kettle whilst it’s boiling and then you can finish cooking using the embers in the fire pit once the kettle has boiled. I have only ever cooked a pancake on the Ghillie so today for lunch I decided to cook some bacon and make some good old fashioned bacon sarnies! After spending the morning weeding it was nice to sit back and enjoy the sunshine eating a delicious lunch, something I would love to do more often on the plot.

Now here is an idea which has been swimming around in my head for the past week. I was thinking how nice it would be to cook lunch up the allotment every weekend and how even nicer it would be to cook the food I was growing. Then I thought how great would it be to film a sort of spin off series to my allotment videos but focus entirely on cooking little snacks and lunches like omelettes etc on the allotment. This is just an idea really but it would be great to hear any feedback on the matter? Would it interest people at all?

This weekend I am planning on cooking my fresh broad beans on the stove and adding them to a salad freshly picked from my Dads allotment, I just can’t wait! :)

Project Pond is Complete!

I finished my little wildlife pond at the weekend and I am so happy with it. It turned out a little larger then I originally planned but it fits in the flower patch perfectly and hopefully that means more frogs can come and live in it (fingers crossed!) It now measures roughly 60cm deep (recommended depth to protect frogs from harsh winter weather), 1 metre in width and 1.5 metres in length. It has a slope on one end where any animals that fall in the pond by accident can easily clamber out. I also created two shelved areas about 30cm deep where some plants can sit, this also creates a nice shallow area for tadpoles to gather.

It didn’t take long to create at all mainly due to its size, however it took me a while to decided on the shape and layout resulting in me having to swap a previously brought pond liner for a larger one! I could have easily made my little pond in a weekend if I had all the supplies before had, and if I didnt keep changing my mind! The plants were the easy part and it was made so much simpler by the helpful advice the shop assistants gave me at World of Water in Romsey. I instantly fell in love with the Myosotis Scorpioides which is a water forget-me-not, I just adore the little delicate blue flowers so I just had to have one and plus the leaves are perfect for egg laying too. Now I was told that this particular plant can spread so I will be keeping an eye on it so I can make sure it stays a perfect size for my pond. The other plants I have in the pond are oxygenating plants, these are there to help keep the water clean whilst giving the wildlife that much needed oxygen. I have two bunches of Elodea crispa which float around the ponds surface, and another oxygenating plant called Ranunculus Aquatilis, which has the added bonus of flowering from June until September.

I managed to find a pile of pebbles and large rocks in the back of my parents garden, they weren’t needed for anything so I gave them a new home and carefully arranged them around the edge of my pond. This was the perfect way to hide the awful pond liner border and I’m planning on planting a few alpine plants amongst the rocks, although you can easily hide the liner by covering with dirt if you don’t have any rocks laying around! I also placed some of the pebbles and two smaller rocks into the deepest area of the pond so that the frogs or tadpoles can hide from predators. To finish the area off I placed two paving slabs which look like logs to one side of the pond (they were a bargain at a closing down garden centre!) these will lead the way to my grapevine which I am still very adament on having.

My next jobs for that little area include building a small log pile for the frogs to call home and to sow some wildflower seeds around the pond. I managed to pick up a lovely wildflower ‘classic meadow’ seed packet by Thompson and morgan which has UK native flowers and includes perennials and grasses which appear at different stages of the year. I have already planted some verbena, dwarf cosmos, scabious and there are four giant sunflowers growing at the back, also not forgetting ‘Katie’s rose’ bush and the climbing rose at the side of my shed. I expect that in the summer when everything is in full bloom I’m going to have to make some cuts for the years ahead, it looks like it is going to be one jam packed area but I am hoping it won’t be too overwhelming!

I made a video about creating my pond too for those of you who are thinking of creating one in your garden or allotment. I fully recommend it, no matter how small or big the pond it will make a huge difference to the wildlife and it will bring the insects and frogs in which will hopefully eat the slugs. Its a win win situation really :)

Mottisfont Abbey and the World of Water!

Its the bank holiday weekend so we decided to go and spend the day at Mottisfont Abbey again, the sun was shining and we set off early to enjoy the day. We just so happened to be passing an aquatic/pond shop called ‘World of Water’ just down the road in Romsey so I thought I would pop in and swap my pond liner on the way (my pond has grown since I brought my small 2m by 1.5m pond liner!) I absolutely love this shop and it’s full of so many inspirational ideas and displays, it even has a large lake at the back and some of most cutest sheds!

I managed to part swap my liner for a larger 4m by 3m one and a very kind shop worker gave me some great advice whilst I was looking confused by the plants, there were so many to choose from! I managed to buy a water forget-me-not (Myosotis scorpioides), an oxygenating common water crowfoot (Ranunculus aquatilis) and two bunches of oxygenating Elodea crispa. The plan is to place the crowfoot and the water forget-me-not onto some shelves in the pond so that their foliage is above the water, and the elodea crispa is simply just placed into the water to do its buisiness. The water forget-me-not is also supposed to be great for egg laying but I also brought it because I just love forget-me-nots and thought that it would look pretty in the pond aswell as bring some colour to the area. Now I have all the plants all I need to do is finish digging my pond, fill it with a layer of sand and lay down the liner, then I will simply let all this rain we are forecast do it’s job!

Oh and I will quickly just mention how beautiful Mottisfont Abbey was today, the roses were starting to bloom and there were iris’s, fox gloves and many more pretty flowers in the walled gardens. It looked so different then when we last visited back in April and we are planning another visit in July (the joys of being a National Trust member!) We had a picnic and tea on the lawn before going on a 3 mile walk around the estate where we encountered wild meadows, lots of elderflower, prancing deer and some little streams. It was a perfect day :)

Busy Bee!

Oh my, what a busy little bee I have been these past couple of days! I seem to have neglected my poor blog terribly and I do apologize. We are near the end of setting up our campervan hire buisiness (www.sundaecampers.co.uk) and the van is going out on hire this coming weekend so it’s full steam ahead to get everything finished in time. Along with that, a job and the allotment, life is a little hectic! I’ve also been busy filming and I’ve recently put my hazel archway up (a blog post and youtube video will follow shortly!)

My camera is still sitting on the shelf broken as I have not been able to take it to a repair shop yet. I am unbelievably lost without it and I am unable to take any nice photographs of my plot, I don’t own a mobile phone you see and my compact just doesn’t quite cut it (once you use a DSLR you can never go back!) Summer is just round the corner and it’s a little frustating not being able to capture all the flowers starting to bloom, all the veg starting to flower and the allotment looking lovely and green! I think a trip into the dreaded town centre is much needed, fingers crossed it will be a quick fix and a cheap repair otherwise I will have to look at buying another camera body.

On another note there are plans afoot to change my blog into a fully working website with recipes and tutorials galore. Don’t get me wrong, WordPress is great but I find it hard to find the plugins that I need and my brother is a website wizard so I thought a change was in order. It may be a couple of months yet until it’s fully up and running, theres lots of planning to do and it’s taking a while to find an illustrator to draw my website header. Exciting times ahead!

 

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