Polytunnel Build – Part 1

This weekend we finally started the polytunnel build after a drier spell of weather had allowed the ground to firm up a bit. The aim for the weekend was to get the metal frame up, ready to then tackle doors, screens and cover in Part 2.

Jack had already cleared and broadly levelled the area with the digger. First part of the process was to dig in the foundation plates and tubes.

Saturday 12th March

Each foundation tube is attached to a 45cm square plate which needs to be buried 60cm deep. 12 in total. Seemed easy until we hit some very solid clay about 20cm down.

We measured, and dug, and measured, and levelled, and measured diagonals, and measured. Then we dug and measured and levelled and measured and levelled….

Turns out that it’s all clay under there.

At the end of Saturday we had 12 post foundations in the ground. Didn’t look like a great deal for about eight hours of hard labour.


Sunday 13th March

After a bit of light rain overnight we re-convened on Sunday morning to continue with the frame. Hoping that we didn’t make a mess of anything later on the afternoon before!

Hoops went together first. It took a bit of time to get it all worked out – particularly putting all the clips on that we will need later. We assembled them all on the ground first….

Each hoop was then slotted in one by one until all 6 were done. Takes a bit of a shove to bend the bars round to fit – but the careful preparation on the sat meant that everything was spot on.

The next set of steps then installed the ridge bars to provide end to end stability and the wind braces to provide a bit of additional support. The tripod ladder on soft ground was an essential.

Crop bars on, and wind stays secured, then lo and behold at 4pm on Sunday afternoon we had the frame up and a whisker away from completion. Only a couple of missing brackets stopped us – but already in the post from a very responsive supplier.


Hedge Planting

Just in time for half term, we received a delivery of 1200 hedging plants from the Woodland Trust. At our request, the delivery included lots of hazel, plus quickthorn, dogwood, dog rose, euonymus, alder buckthorn, crab apple and field maple. After the recent storms, we knew it might be bit cold, muddy and windy. However, we hadn’t bargained for the blanket of snow that descended upon us by lunchtime. Not that it stopped us….or the dogs!

Starting the ‘no-dig’ beds

Having been thoroughly inspired by the work of Charles Dowding, we have decided to adopt a no-dig approach to our vegetable growing. Jack brought the digger down to the field a few weeks ago and helped to plan the layout. Special thanks to Tim, who ,managed to ensure that all lengths measured the same distance and the rectangle was just that – rather than a parallelogram or trapezium at best!

The space will eventually support 10 long beds with paths in between. A central path will split the plot down the middle. A beech hedge will make up the outer edge of the plot.

Jack has helpfully removed the turf from half of the beds and we are in the process of covering the soil with cardboard, then soil and organic matter as a mulch. The idea being that this will starve any remaining weeds of light and create an undisturbed ground in which to plant. All the good bacteria, fungi, worms and other bugs benefit from this process and in turn help to feed the soil with the nutrients gained from the organic matter at the top of the bed. A further benefit to us humans, is that it saves us from achey backs which is often the reward for digging. The other half of the beds have been started off by laying the upturned sods of turf in a line, and these too will be covered with cardboard and mulch. I’m interested to see whether there is much difference between the approaches. We might even try using a cultivator on one bed, as a way of providing further comparison.

We have started to cover the grass paths temporarily, with weed proof membrane so that the grass does not spread into the beds. The pictures below show the work in progress.

Pumpkins for Charity

We’ve enjoyed growing our own pumpkins for the last three years now. Our aim has always been to grow enough Halloween carving pumpkins for ourselves and local friends and family. The children have had their own pumpkins to nurture and carve creatively. This year, we decided that it might be a nice idea to grow a few more on our newly acquired land. Firstly, it was a bit of a tester to see how well things would grow on the plot – what challenges we might face. Secondly, we saw it as an opportunity to raise a bit of money for charity. Finally, it gave us an excuse to share our ideas with local people. The pumpkins grew really well, despite the slug issues along the way. The warm weather meant the pumpkin foliage won the battle in the end. We raised a pleasing £222 for The Brain Tumour Charity. And, in an effort to grow our community too, we got a chance to have a good chat with many of our Eastby neighbours in the October sunshine.

Pumpkins laid out just after harvesting

October 2021

Tree Planting

March 2021

We acquired just over 3.6 acres of land in March. We were not entirely sure what we were going to do with it – just that it needed to be beneficial to more than just ourselves. Looking at the land around us, we felt tree planting would be a great place to start. A friend of a friend, who happened to work for the Woodland Trust, was able to help us source 750 trees, and over the course of a week in early March, we planted oak, field maple, silver birch, rowan, hawthorn, crab apple, bird cherry, dog rose, dog wood and hazel. When I say we – that was us, and a group of our very willing friends and neighbours.

June 2017 – The Beginning

We moved to Eastby as a family of five. We had been looking for somewhere to move to for about four years, but nothing quite matched our criteria – a house with character, set in a village but not isolated, a big garden, and close to a town that had a train station and schools. When we viewed our house for the first time, it was a lovely spring morning. The first thing to hit us were the views out from many windows, to the south facing garden. Without doubt, it was the garden that won us over. However, the 3/4 acre plot was not without major issues – invasive weeds and a lack of attention over the past ten years had left it looking overgrown and a bit over-facing. There was an ornamental upper garden with a patio area, pond and large beds with shrubs and perennials. These beds were consumed with ground elder. The main paddock was covered mainly with head high nettles. The vegetable plot was difficult to access, but the remains of an old greenhouse was visible, as were the two plum trees and cherry tree. That first summer, we covered our legs and arms and enjoyed picking the most amazing crop of plums that inspired us to think about resurrecting the plot to recreate the family vegetable garden.