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Showing posts with label fruit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fruit. Show all posts

Growing Food with No Land!

 “What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly.” 

Tom Paine 

You may have got the idea by now that simple living consists only of growing, cooking and eating your own food; while this is true for many, others live a simple lifestyle without recourse to their own land. Before humans were farmers, they were gatherers and, in the way, history tends to move in cycles, many find themselves to be gatherers in the twenty-first century.  To this end, why not explore other ways to live simply for those without land, and even for those who live in the middle of a city with no access to land.  


First let us look at the options for those who do not have land but would still like to grow their own food, or at least grow some of their own food. You may grow food on land that is not owned by you, or you need to consider other simple means of feeding yourself and your family. 

Allotments 

"Was the earth made to preserve a few covetous, proud men to live at ease, and for them to bag and barn up the treasures of the Earth from others, that these may beg or starve in a fruitful land; or was it made to preserve all her children?" 

~Gerrard Winstanley (Digger) 

The seventeenth century in England produced a large number of radical groups who questioned the status quo and looked for new answers. The Diggers held that the land belonged to all, irrespective of wealth, and that it should be shared amongst all people to grow their own food. In many ways the allotment movement draws on the spirit of these impressive and inspiring pioneers. 

In much of the English-speaking world, a small parcel of land, no bigger than a suburban back garden, is called an allotment. In Britain, the need for people without garden space to have access to land for food production is recognized in law in the Small Holdings and Allotments Act 1908, as well as further legislation in 1922 and 1950. Other areas of the world have similar legislation, so it is well worth checking for local provision where you live. In World War II, allotments were an important part of the ‘Dig for Victory’ movement (called ‘Victory Gardens’ in the US) in which everybody was encouraged to grow their own food and help feed the country. I feel that the need is still here with us today to make food production an important part of everybody’s commitment to solving the world’s environmental and economic problems. 

Local Authorities usually have a waiting list for allotments; how long that list is depends very much on the local population and how fashionable allotment holding is at any moment in time. Over the years allotments have occasionally become the ‘trendy’ thing to have, but such surges of public interest often wax and wane, with allotments again becoming desired only by those who want them to grow food over a sustained period. 

If you are lucky enough to get to the head of the list and gain the tenancy of an allotment, please take care; most have clauses that if you do not look after them properly, and allow them to become overgrown, then your tenancy will cease, and the land be re-allotted to the next person on the waiting list. You need to take your responsibility carefully, and while the land is under your stewardship you must look after it as well as you would land that you owned. 

A great many things relating to an allotment are down to luck, the position and direction of your plot, the immediate neighbours on other plots (sometimes people can be so friendly that you cannot get the peace and quiet you need to work the land), and the way it was left by the previous tenants. I was once tenant of an allotment and had to work on it early in the morning to avoid some of the more ‘chatty’ folks on plots nearby who never ceased giving unsolicited advice at great length; you may be luckier! My allotment had the added disadvantage of having plots not adequately fenced off from surrounding countryside; herds of vegetable-lusting deer would regularly visit and strip the plots of anything green.  However, many find that renting an allotment fully compensates them for not having land to grow at home, and allows them a degree of self-sufficiency that would otherwise prove impossible. 

“On 1899 May 23, the Aston Clinton Parish Council held a meeting to allot allotments and smallholdings, not exceeding three acres, to labouring inhabitants of the parish. There were five labourers anxious to take the land at Stanbridge so lots were drawn; the winners were Reuben Lovegrove….” 

(Forgive me a self-indulgent quote about my great-grandfather ~ RL) 

Community Gardening 


In many towns and cities, the idea of allotments has been superseded by community gardens; an area of wasteland, publicly or privately owned, is taken over by a community who jointly use it to produce food. These gardens may be run as a cooperative venture or run by a committee, but the idea is the same; you give up your time to work on the community garden and in return you get a share of the produce. The really good thing about community gardens is that those working in such schemes are usually very committed, and the sight of a community garden in full flourish is a wonderful thing. You may need to do some homework to find a scheme operating close to you, and if you live out of town you may find that such schemes are much less popular. 

“For pleasure has no relish unless we share it.” 

~ Virginia Woolf 

Shared Gardens 

You may be part of a large family with no space to grow your own food, while not far from you may live someone who is unable to look after their garden due to old age, disability or even a lack of interest. In many towns and cities, schemes are operating that get people from the two groups together; the garden is worked to produce food and a good share goes to the owner of the garden and the rest goes to the family who have put in the work. Assuming some degree of goodwill and communication is present, the scheme seems wonderful; those with large gardens that they are unable or unwilling to tend get maintenance and some fresh food, whilst the landless workers get to care for a garden and attain a degree of self-sufficiency. If such a scheme does not operate close to you, could have a go at setting it up yourself with any neighbours that are amenable. 

“The world is so empty if one thinks only of mountains, rivers and cities; but to know someone who thinks and feels with us, and who, though distant, is close to us in spirit, this makes the earth for us an inhabited garden.”  

~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 

Guerilla Gardening 


Guerilla gardening is the possibly illegal (though unlikely to be challenged in most areas) act of finding some derelict ground, publicly or privately owned, and growing food on it. The risk is that you may not get to harvest your crops as the land may be cleared by the rightful owner or your produce will be stolen, but chances are that at the end of the season you can harvest and enjoy your produce. 

The act of guerilla gardening itself may be as simple as sowing some seeds and then coming back at the end of the season and seeing what has come up, or seriously cultivating the land as one would on an allotment. Some local authorities in the UK have been very supportive of this idea and have cooperated to the extent of helping to identify possible sites.  Others have been less impressed and taken to destroying any site found. You can try to find out whether any organized guerilla gardening goes on in your locality, otherwise you just have to do it yourself, but please don’t grow food on any land that is heavily polluted. Again, for obvious reasons, this seems more of an urban than a rural pursuit. 

I am not a guerilla gardener myself, but have certainly sown seeds of ‘bee friendly’ wild flowers in many areas of wasteland, hoping that this will help feed pollinators and that the flowers will seed themselves at the end of the season. In fact, if you have ever tossed an apple core into the hedgerow you might be a guerilla gardener yourself! It can be argued that the American settler ‘Johnny Appleseed’ may have been the most successful guerilla gardener of all time! 

Foraging

“Then red ones inked up and that hunger 

Sent us out with milk cans, pea tins, jam-pots 

Where briars scratched and wet grass bleached our boots.” 

~ “Blackberry Picking”   Seamus Heaney 

Nothing is as wonderful as coming home with a basket of fresh, free food and enjoying it; foraging can be done by anyone but perhaps those with land to cultivate are too busy in the late summer and autumn to take full advantage of the bounty. To some, foraging is a pot or two of blackberries in late summer, but to many others it is a year-round activity that involves the whole family and can provide real food of value. What you can forage depends very much on where you live but be sure that food is out there for you to find. A very good guidebook is essential, especially at the start of your foraging career (see suggestions at the end of the chapter), but as time goes on you will develop an eye for free food. 

Generally, you don’t have to worry about the organic nature of foraged food but do take care when harvesting near heavy traffic; it is best to take nothing too close to the road, and take care if you are foraging in fields that have been sprayed with pesticides. Other dangers in foraging all involve not researching your target crops well enough.  In the UK in recent years there have been deaths resulting from mistaking deadly nightshade berries for blueberries and eating toxic fungi in mistake for field mushrooms. Again, your insurance against these problems is in using an excellent guidebook or going foraging with an expert. 

As well as foraging for food you can look for firewood, kindling (including dry pinecones), bean and pea sticks, and some pick up scraps of wool in sheep fields for spinning and weaving. 

Growing Food Indoors 

If you have and windows in your house or a dark cupboard, then you can grow some of your own food with very simple equipment.  No one is suggesting that you will become self-sufficient by doing this, but you can supplement you diet with fresh green herbs, sprouting seeds and bean sprouts pretty much throughout the year. 

Some seeds are very easily grown in seed sprouters - a container that can be rinsed through with fresh water several times a day; more ‘sticky’ seeds like cress and basil are best spouted on paper in a small tray. 

Despite having enough land to grow food for the family, I still sprout seeds on a windowsill, especially in early winter and spring. 

Those with the space to do so can also grow a much wider number of crops indoors, but be warned, if your home gets damp in the winter months then growing anything more than sprouting seeds indoors is not for you. 


(C) Ray Lovegrove 2016 2022

Your Outside Space


‘When we are at home in the garden, tending and nurturing all its plants, animals and minerals, living with them through all the seasons and days, then healing comes upon us like a gift and makes us whole.’ 

~ Christopher Bamford. 


In 1854 Henry David Thoreau published his book Walden, or a Live in the Woods. Thoreau, a Unitarian and transcendentalist, spent two years two months and two days living alone in the woods near Concord in Massachusetts in a self-made wooden house, foraging for and growing his own food. The book has been influential, both as a pioneer work of self-sufficiency, but also as a work of literature. Critics of Thoreau will always point out that his experience was not quite as ‘back-to-earth’ as might be believed, Concord was no too far away from ‘civilization’ and he did ‘send home the washing’ to his mother each week, and he had a steady stream of literary and philosophical visitors, but criticisms aside it is a wonderfully documented experiment. Thoreau did simplify his life and did use the experience to shape a philosophy of self-sufficiency which helps those of us attempting the same thing today.

Few of us have the means to do as Thoreau did and go out into the woods and ‘do our own thing’, but any of us with some land can have a pretty good attempt at a degree of self-sufficiency. Growing food is not just a process of producing food to avoid having to buy it, growing your own food is a way of connecting yourself with the land and with the seasons, it is as much a spiritual thing as a practical exercise and the  fulfilment of harvest is a rich one even if your crop is small. Even those without land can share in this bounty (Simple Gathering)

"I used to visit and revisit it a dozen times a day, and stand in deep contemplation over my vegetable progeny with a love that nobody could share or conceive of who had never taken part in the process of creation. It was one of the most bewitching sights in the world to observe a hill of beans thrusting aside the soil, or a rose of early peas just peeping forth sufficiently to trace a line of delicate green" 

~ Henry David Thoreau 

How to Grow Food 

Growing food changed humans from nomadic hunter gatherers into agriculturalists, so you could argue that it was the very beginning of what we call civilization. As you start on the process of growing your own food you may think that the deciding factor in success is how much land you have, this is very far from the truth. Geography, climate, weather, sunlight, soil, water and luck all exert a powerful influence on what you can grow on your land, and how effectively you grow your food. My old house stood on one acre of land which is about 130metres above sea level on the border between Wales and England, on moving here from the Thames Valley my first growing year was an education in what I could no longer grow and it took me a couple of years to realize that, early first frost, and late last frost, combined with a wet and windy climate and a vast rabbit population, would dictate many of my crop choices. It will be the same for you, wherever you grow your food you must take into account the constraints offered by nature; gardening books and television gardening advice can give you the rough direction, but you need to travel the roads and byways of your land yourself. Whatever land you are blessed with, it will give you food and that food will be good, give it time. Since moving to Sweden the new challenges involved with growing food in a shorter growing season have been many.

Of course it could be that your land is greater than a garden, you may have a smallholding or even a farm. Again success is not won easily and having the land is only the first hurdle in feeding yourself and your family. 


What to Grow

The answer to this is simple, it just may take some time to uncover the answer. Firstly, look at your area and see what others are growing successfully. If your neighbour can grow asparagus well then it should be a crop that you can consider, if you can walk for miles before coming across a decent soft fruit crop, then perhaps it is just not the area. This should not stop you trying to grow what you want, but it should be considered.  

Your local climate may be difficult, late frosts, early frosts, dry summers wet summers, slugs, deer, rabbits! Climate change is adding to the unpredictability of the whole process of growing food. This is one good reason for growing a wide range of crops, whatever the weather some things will succeed, and other things fail, monoculture is never the right path to self-sufficiency. 

If you have limited land you may want to consider not growing crops because they are available to you at low cost elsewhere. If you live a potato growing area; I would be foolish to give over great areas of your vegetable plot to grow potatoes if the farmer down the road will sell them to me at minimal cost. Likewise, if you have the taste for an expensive crop, like asparagus or globe artichokes, then growing them in your plot might save you more money over the years than growing crops that can usually be obtained cheaply like carrots or swede. 

Keep careful notes, nothing is more fun than using an ‘appointment diary’ to keep a record of what you sow, you can also smile to yourself that you have no appointments to keep! In this way you can keep a record of your successes and failures over the years and eventually have a good selection of reliable varieties that do well for you, this will help prevent you from being seduced by the descriptions offered in seed catalogues that are, at best highly ‘imaginative’. Whatever you grow determine to try two of three new things each year, in this way you're growing will never lack interest nor will you miss out on exciting new crops. 


“The greatest change we need to make is from consumption to production, even if on a small scale, in our own gardens. If only ten percent of us do this, there is enough for everyone. Hence the futility of revolutionaries who have no gardens, who depend on the very system they attack, and who produce words and bullets, not food and shelter.” 

― Bill Mollison 

Vegetables 

Obviously the first thing that you will want to consider is growing vegetables, these are not the only crops that you will want to grow so don’t use all of your land up for them without some careful thought first. Summer vegetables are fine, but don’t fall into the trap of growing more than you can eat, preserve, or freeze. Give over a good proportion of your growing area to those crops that produce a harvest at other times of the year particularly winter and early spring. Unless you live in a very cold area you should be able to find varieties of sprouts, kale, cabbage, and leek that will ensure your plot is productive throughout the year. Digging and the correct use of manure and lime are important for your crops, so plan your year as well as your space carefully. Seed catalogues will frequently tell you that a new variety is better than all its predecessors, however, this is rarely true and, as far as I know only time will tell. 



Trees with edible fruit and nuts

Apples, pears, plums, damsons, cherries, hazelnuts and walnuts are all worth growing if you have the space. In addition to the food they may provide you with sticks for growing peas and beans and perhaps some firewood. Trees can also provide you with useful windbreaks which have a very important role in your growing area. While all of these trees take a few years to become productive the investment is worth it, an apple tree can repay you its original cost in its first two years of apple production. If you do not have fruit trees growing near you then you will have to plant more than one of each species to provide a pollination partner. If you live in an area where spring can come late, then choose late flowering varieties where possible. 


Soft Fruit 

One of the best things to grow in any garden is soft fruit like raspberries, strawberries, blackcurrants, red-currants, gooseberries, blueberries, wine berries, etc. Not only are they much less time consuming than vegetables, but they can be easily reserved, in a number of ways so overproduction is rarely a problem. Again the cost of the plants is soon covered by fruit production and careful planning will provide you with years of cropping. The different species of plant listed above all, have some special growing requirements so do your research well before planting. In almost every garden you will need to protect your crop from birds, I like to keep mine under netting and then, when I have harvested all I need I remove the net and let the wild birds move in for a feast! 

Herbs 

You can grow herbs in any sized garden and it proves to be very profitable indeed, not only do you have fresh herbs to cook with when you want them, but you can also grow some to treat minor ailments With a few notable exceptions (like bay for instance) dried herbs are very disappointing, so preserve them by freezing or making herb pesto’s which can be then be used in cooking throughout the year. Some herbs are perennial and need a sheltered spot in the garden, but others can be grown annually very easily. When I first moved to my current house I carefully planned an herb garden, but now I have planted herbs all over the place, in vegetable plots, containers and flower beds, you can find clumps of chives, sage and various mints in all kinds of corners. Plant some of your favourite herbs close to the house in pots so that you can pop out and harvest them while cooking (and find them in the dark). Pots can be moved into a polytunnel or conservatory in the winter to prolong the growing season and protect them from frosts. You should certainly consider chives, mint, sage, thyme, oregano/marjoram, parsley, rosemary, winter and summer savoury and, if you have the space and your winters are no too harsh, bay. 


Decorative Plants 

However large or small your growing area is, please don’t forget to grow flowers, shrubs and trees which are beautiful, but not necessarily edible. Flowers will do much to encourage valuable pollinators to your garden so please choose those that have open structures which allow for nectar and pollen to be taken. Flowers can make your garden more beautiful and can also provide you with cut flowers for the house and dried flowers for the winter months. Some flowers are very useful to grow in your vegetable plot because they either smell so strongly they put pests off the scent of your crops, or they act as a breeding ground for friendly predators, or they act as a decoy for predators. Pot marigolds and nasturtiums are very useful and, self-sown, germinating nasturtium seeds is a very good indicator that the soil is warm enough to sow many vegetables.  

Shrubs, bushes and trees all have a use in providing hedging, windbreaks, hiding the unsightly and protecting your privacy. Most importantly a garden which finds room for beauty, as well as food production, will be a wonderful environment for you and your family to work and relax in. 

Protected Growing 

For most of us the biggest problem we have in growing food is the shortness of the growing season. This can be extended by a number of means, for instance starting seedling off on a windowsill indoors will have your plants off to a rapid start when the weather is warm enough for them to go outside. If you are lucky enough to have a conservatory, or greenhouse attached to your home, you can take full advantage of lighter and warmer conditions than outdoors environment for much of the year.  

Polythene is a cheap, easily recycled, and very useful material for making protected areas outside, either on its own over metal hoops, or shaped into a polytunnel. Polytunnels are not as effective as conventional greenhouses, but are very useful for protecting crops. The night time temperature in my tunnel is never less than four degrees above the outside temperature, so in spring and autumn you can extend the growing season by up to four weeks, and in summer you can raise crops, like tomatoes, cucumbers and peppers which may not grow well outside in your area. 

Take care to choose your tunnel and its position carefully and be aware that in some areas they require planning permission, so please check with your local authority before you get building.  Every few years you will need to change the polythene on your tunnel so be sure to recycle the old cover and fit in with your obligation to recycle wherever possible. 



Organic or Not? 

Obviously a simple grower will want to use the soil in a way that does not contaminate it for future generations, and will want to protect animals that have as much right to the land as you do. On the other hand, if you do nothing all your crops will be lost and your work in vain. The answer is to select a form of growing that has minimum impact on the environment. For most of us organic gardening is the way, but before we fully accept the concept we might like to consider a few points. Firstly ‘the organic movement’ has had a tendency to go back in time to the agricultural methods of a time before World War II. If you read books on growing written before that time you will find it quite common to kill weeds with concentrated sulphuric acid and to spray fruit with terrible substances like arsenate of lead, because something used to be done doesn’t mean the environmental impact was not significant, it was just unmeasured. I have also seen organic gardeners widely accept volcanic ash as a fertilizer because it is ‘natural’ whereas in fact, it contains dangerous levels of selenium compounds, very toxic substances. Err on the side of caution before using a product just because it is labelled as ‘natural’ or ‘organic’ both words are widely used in advertising and seldom have much meaning.  The ‘real way’ of organic gardening is to use any way you can come up with without resorting to harmful chemicals. 

In my garden I apply the following rules to help conserve the environment and get a reasonable crop; 

  • If crops seem to be doing fine then don’t use any pesticide on them at all! 
  • If you have leaves attacked by insect pests like then try spraying with water to remove them, or a solution of soft-soap applied regularly. If you are driven to use something more powerful use a spray that is biodegradable and non-toxic to humans like pyrethrums of a suspension of rape oil in water. 
  • Net, cover and protect your crops as effectively as you can. 
  • Make a scarecrow, but be careful they can give you a terrible shock if you look up from your work to see them standing above you! 
  • If slugs are a problem, then try trapping them in beer traps, or collecting them at night. You may have some success with biological controls like nematodes, but these can prove very expensive with a large area to treat. If you have to use other manufactured remedies ensure that you use well tested, biologically friendly, products and use them very sparingly. A pet duck, if you can tolerate the mess, will eat itself silly on slugs and happily spend the day finding them. 
  • Encourage wildlife to your garden that feed on pests; hedgehogs, frogs and toads get looked after very well in my garden, it’s the least I can do! 
  • Ginger cats are excellent at getting your garden free of rabbits, rats and mice; in my experience they are better than any other shade of cat at doing this. 
  • Homemade compost is the best way to feed your plants. 
  • Growing plants can benefit from regular spaying with a seaweed solution. 
  • Proprietary organic fertilizers are, in my opinion, very useful on occasions and I do use them to boost growth on plants that will not succeed otherwise. 
  • Weeds are kept under control by hand weeding and hoeing. Clearing grassland to convert into food growing areas is very difficult without the one-off use of a biodegradable weed killer, but success can be had if you cover the area with black polythene for about six months prior to digging. Perhaps the best approach to weeds is to find those that are good to eat, and those that chickens like to eat and tolerate them to some extent. Other weeds of the perennial kind need to be dug out. It is wrong to expect a weed free garden, but it is bad gardening to let the weeds take over. 
  • The golden rule is that whatever substances you use on your garden, don’t use them more often than necessary, and store them safely. If you can avoid using them altogether, then that is the simple way. 


The Large Plot 

If your plot is large the best way to manage it is by conventional growing using crop rotation. For instance divide you plot into four and use them as 1 Potatoes, 2 Brassica (cabbage family), 3 green leafy vegetable and beans, 4 roots. Every year you chance the order of plots that no crop grows in the same place for four years. You will need to also find space for fruit trees, soft fruit, and herbs, but these generally don’t get included in the rotation. You might also like to consider a polytunnel. Large plots do require a lot of work, especially if your locality has unpredictable weather and you find yourself with late frosts and summer droughts.  Larger plots do not allow the kind of micro-management that smaller plots allow so you have to space crops very generously to allow for hoeing, smaller plots allow for more hand weeding. If a large space is available to you, but your time or energy is limited, consider fencing a smaller area off for food production and leaving some of you

The Medium Sized Plot

For any medium sized plot of land the best and simplest way to use it is a traditional kitchen garden. Vegetable plots are positioned with some suitable paving, or gravel, paths to separate them. Crop rotation should be used and flowers and fruit bushes incorporated into the general design. Intensive cultivation is much more manageable than on a larger plot so plants can be spaced a little closer and crops can be raised by sequential cropping; as soon as one crop is harvested the next crop goes in (autumn/winter crops like leeks are quickly followed by summer cabbages, or sprouts followed by potatoes). If your soil is poor, or you are unable to dig easily, then you should consider the use of raised beds, these are expensive to set up, but are very effective ways of maximizing your food production. 

The Small Plot 

To my mind any realistic ideas of crop rotation are inappropriate for a small area, though you should still avoid growing things in exactly the same place as last year. A better way is to start a potager style garden. Here vegetables, fruit, herbs, and flowers are grown together in a way that both produces good crops and looks beautiful. This does mean that your garden does not need to have separate flower beds, the flowers are simply mixed in with the vegetables. Even large gardens can gainfully introduce a potager style for the area close to the hose with large scale vegetable production in the main plots. 

A potager needs to be looked after well and the gardener needs a lot of time on hands and knees, but such a beautiful result is possible in the first year. You can make your potager very ornate and geometric if you want, but keep in mind that it’s a simple life you want! 


A Wok Garden 

If the space for you to grow vegetables is very small consider starting a ‘wok garden’. Simply grow very small numbers of vegetable plants by successional sowings. Every evening, in the summer months just visit your garden and collect the small amounts of vegetables ready for eating; this might be just a few pea pods, half a handful of green beans, a pepper, spring onions, some spinach leaves and a few radishes, whatever is just right to eat. Back in the kitchen chop the vegetables and cook them, with rice or noodles in a wok. You simply don’t need large harvests to do this and you can carry on cropping all season. Salads can also be grown this way, everyday just take what is ready to crop and eat it. If you live alone, or as a couple, this method of gardening and eating will provide you with really fresh food for a good part of the year, in winter months you can grow many vegetables indoors in pots. It may not be self-sufficient, but it is a way of growing and eating your own food. 

Stocking your Plot 

You can buy seeds for your garden or you can buy young plants, but both of these are increasingly expensive. If you are in a community of growers then the sharing of plants can work wonderfully well, you simply sow a tray of cabbage, transplant as many as you need to your neighbour. Don’t ask for or expect, anything back in return, but after a while a community of ‘plant passers’ will be established. Saving your own seed it an excellent way of saving money, just leave a plant or two go to seed, collect and dry them for sowing next year. You can save seeds from most plants, but be warned, you will not get what you expect by saving the seeds of F1 plants, and even if your plants are not F1 you can expect the occasional surprise. Beans, peas, sweet peas, all members of the onion family and beetroot are especially easy to collect seeds from. I leave parsnips to seed themselves in the garden and look for self-sown plants the next year. 


As an experienced grower, you will find that it gets easier to spot self-sown plants in your garden. To the inexperienced eye, these are weeds, but once you can recognize them simply transplant them to a more convenient spot, you will be surprised how effective the collection of these free plants can be. 

Compost 

Whatever the size of your garden you will need to make a compost heap. Ideally, your compost will be a wonderful and nutritious supplement to your soil, but in reality it will vary in composition and quality. This is not a terrible problem, whatever the quality of your compost as long as it is well decomposed and fibrous it will be of use to you in the garden. Uses weeds, animal manure, grass-clippings and biodegradable waste from your kitchen, try to layer the heap carefully and don’t include large items without chopping them first. In summer your heap will be useable quite quickly, but in cold weather it may take some months. If you are unhappy with the quality of your finished product then layer it with fresh material in a new heap. You can add wood ashes, but not ashes from coal fires, if you add too much of one thing, then mixing the heap up will help material to decompose. You may need to cover your compost heap in very wet weather. 

(C) Ray Lovegrove 2016 2022