Our allotment day began with lovely sunshine so we immediately set to work weeding some of the beds which need to be replaced. We had grand plans of weeding and then building our new beds however we were not prepared for finding so many mini beasts! We observed some of the beautiful flowers which had grown and spotted several bees happily sitting on them, one of which was one of the biggest bees we had ever seen before! There were spiders, worms, centipedes and wood lice galore. The children are hugely intrigued and we chatted about the type of homes the mini beasts have, what they might eat (we seem to think it may be the mini beasts who have been enjoying munching on our wooden vegetable beds!). Some of the weeds were really tricky to get out and we tried all different techniques. We tried spades, forks and even our bare hands. The doc leaves and dandelions were particularly stubborn. One of the children showed us just how it’s done and with a lot of determination and strength, he managed to pull out a huge weed which was even too tricky for the grown ups.
We had an early lunch as we were soooooo hungry. It must have been all the hard work we had put into our weeding. The children enjoyed chatting and eating until we spotted a rather large black cloud rolling in. We already knew the forecast for the afternoon was rain but we had our fingers crossed it wouldn’t arrive. We grabbed our food bags, coats and water bottles and raced to the big shed. The big shed was warm and dry and we listened to the rain as it pitter pattered down onto the roof. We needed to think of a new plan as the beds we had been weeding were starting to get very muddy and soggy! We decided to head to the little poly tunnel and prepare it for all the pots of vegetables which have been growing over the last few weeks. The children helped to move sunflowers. cucumbers, marigolds and pumpkins so we could focus on planting more seeds in the big poly tunnel.
One group of children worked hard to repot our tomato plants and some of our sunflowers whilst the other children planted some herbs, lupin, strawberries, grasses and flowers. It was hard work filling all the traps and pots with compost and some of the seeds were really small so we needed to use our pincer fingers to drop them into place. We made sure we labelled everything and placed them along the benches. We gave everything a drink before we headed back to the minibus. We can’t wait to get back and see how our seeds are doing.