In the back of The New Organic Grower, Eliot Coleman recommends many valuable books but, a few months ago, courtesy of Abe Books, I found a copy of one that had particularly taken my attention – Intensive Gardening by Dalziel O'Brien (1956).
Eliot lists it as one of his favourites and I think I can see why. Unless I am very mistaken, it seems that the germ of his approach to weed control ("Don't weed – cultivate!") is here in this old classic book.
The author writes about using what he calls a 'Scrapper' to clear and cultivate the covered beds in an old 'Dutch Light' system. This hand tool looks quite like some small onion hoes that I have seen advertised but never bought or used.
It occurred to me that it also has a lot in common with one of the South Korean hand tools that we sell, the 'Ambi' Ho-Mi. Ironically, this used to be known as the 'Scraper' Ho-Mi, but we re-named it to emphasise its suitability for ambidextrous use and therefore its appeal to left-handed gardeners. The name 'Scraper' did not seem to do it justice, which may help to explain why it has not been so popular as its siblings, the Large and Small Ho-Mis. Not until now, anyway!
For me at least, it has now moved well up the ratings and is my preferred Ho-Mi. For quick removal of seedling weeds ('weedlings') between crop plants in the the raised beds of our polytunnel, it seems to be the ideal tool. I am not left-handed (maybe slightly ambidextrous) but the more balanced shape of this Ho-Mi lends itself to precise moves to either side, minimising the risk of decapitating our crops!
For bed preparation in the tunnel, the Oscillating Hoe is my favourite. (In the field, it's a wheelhoe with stirrup hoe attachments). For weedling clearance around well-spaced crops, especially in the open, the Collinear Hoe remains my weapon of choice. But as soon as I need to work in smaller areas, and especially when the Collinear Hoe's long handle threatens to tangle with strings supporting crops, I now reach for my 'Ambi' Ho-Mi and can work quickly along the rows.
I don't 'scrape' with it, just drawing it along the surface. No – following the principle of Eliot's Collinear Hoe – I hold the tool almost vertical and slice through the soil just below the surface. As soon as I had developed this action, the next step was obvious – sharpen the blade! Those weedlings don't just get disturbed, they get sliced!
So, are my polytunnel beds all completely weed-free? Not yet! But at least I have a quick way of getting those seedling weeds before they get big enough to spawn the next generation.
What a harmonious combination of 1950's British gardening innovation, 1990's American inspiration and centuries-old Korean tradition!
Wednesday, 15 June 2016
Monday, 11 April 2016
Trying to Order a Micro 20 Soil Blocker?
If you have been wanting to order a Micro 20 Soil Blocker and can't find an 'Add to Cart' button, you are not alone.
Please accept our apologies for this. It turns out that there is a problem at the server where our website is hosted, and the technical guys are working hard to fix it.
As soon as they have done that, we should be able to get that missing button back on our Soil Blockers page but, in the meantime, here is a button for you.
If you prefer, you can just email us and we shall send you a PayPal invoice for the right amount.
Thanks to a kind customer who alerted us to this problem!
UPDATE: As of 26th April, the problem seems to be fixed and the 'Add to Cart' button is back on our Soil Blockers page. We'll leave it here for a while, too!
Micro 20 Soil Blockers cost £13.20 each, including UK postage.
As soon as they have done that, we should be able to get that missing button back on our Soil Blockers page but, in the meantime, here is a button for you.
If you prefer, you can just email us and we shall send you a PayPal invoice for the right amount.
Thanks to a kind customer who alerted us to this problem!
UPDATE: As of 26th April, the problem seems to be fixed and the 'Add to Cart' button is back on our Soil Blockers page. We'll leave it here for a while, too!
Micro 20 Soil Blockers cost £13.20 each, including UK postage.
Saturday, 13 February 2016
Preparing for Spring . . . Saved by Black Plastic ?
Well, Spring must be coming sometime soon - we hope!


It may not be a thing of beauty, but it does the job until we are able to fit a new cover on a calm, warm day in the Spring.
Even inside is not too dark, and it means that Dave has been able to get on with preparing the beds and planting more winter salad.
That white bed is covered with fleece on simple wire frames - an idea from Eliot Coleman which seems to work, keeping the worst of the cold or frost away. More covers planned for some of the other beds, too.
In the Autumn, it was so wet that we waited for drier weather to do our normal autumn tasks - and waited - and waited . . .
Now perhaps it is not exactly getting drier, but the soil is not staying 100% saturated for quite all the time, so maybe we had better get on with some of those Autumn tasks before Spring starts chasing us. There is some talk of an early Spring, they say.
Meanwhile, we have been trying to continue the battle against the legacy of weed infestation left by our tenants. Fortunately, we have a reliable (and free) source of heavy-duty black plastic and tyre dealers are always ready to bring out a van-load of scrap tyres, so gradually an increasing area of the field has been covered as we stake our claim to weed-free soil - eventually, we hope!
But the winter has not just been wet, it has also been windy - VERY windy sometimes - so that plastic and those tyres have been re-laid quite a number of times . . .
. . . and the polytunnel has not escaped either! Dave had patched up the damaged plastic cover when we came back, and it survived OK until the worst winds of the last few months. It didn't really owe us anything as it was the original one from 1999, but mid-winter is not the best time to replace a plastic cover (wet, windy, cold . . .) plus we had some winter salads growing happily in there and the stormy blasts would not do them any good.
So, once again, black plastic and tyres to the rescue!
It may not be a thing of beauty, but it does the job until we are able to fit a new cover on a calm, warm day in the Spring.
Even inside is not too dark, and it means that Dave has been able to get on with preparing the beds and planting more winter salad.
That white bed is covered with fleece on simple wire frames - an idea from Eliot Coleman which seems to work, keeping the worst of the cold or frost away. More covers planned for some of the other beds, too.
The 'jungle' you can see on the right is Cape Gooseberry plants - still cropping in January! They have now been trimmed back and replanted in what we hope will be an easier place to manage them. Hopefully another good crop in 2016!
There is still plenty more to do, both inside and especially in the field . . .
Friday, 1 January 2016
The Turning of the Year
New year, new plans, new hopes, new ideas . . .
. . . and a new price list from Blackberry Lane! Quite a few prices DOWN !
Glaser Tools in Switzerland usually publish their new prices about now, and in 2015 there was no change as world steel prices had levelled or even dropped a little. This year, the price of quality spring steel (used for the tool blades) has apparently risen, so they have increased their prices to us.
However, over the last few months, the exchange rate between the UK Pound and the Swiss Franc has improved, so we have actually been able to offer REDUCED PRICES for almost the whole Glaser range.
You can find our 2016 Catalogue at http://www.blackberrylane.co.uk/PDFs/Cat1601.pdf and our 2016 Price List at http://www.blackberrylane.co.uk/PDFs/prices2016a1.pdf or you can download them from our website.
This may be a good opportunity to buy, as the exchange rate can easily change the other way, plus there may well be the usual rise in postage costs in late March or early April.
Glaser Tools have also introduced a new larger-size Aluminium Adjustable Rake, 96 cm wide with 26 teeth. Sorry, no pictures yet, but it sounds like a larger version of the existing 74 cm/20 tooth and 55 cm/18 tooth ones which have been proving quietly popular since we started stocking them back in 2013.
They also have some new tools planned for 2016. We are awaiting these with interest, and will let you know about them when they arrive.
. . . and a new price list from Blackberry Lane! Quite a few prices DOWN !
Glaser Tools in Switzerland usually publish their new prices about now, and in 2015 there was no change as world steel prices had levelled or even dropped a little. This year, the price of quality spring steel (used for the tool blades) has apparently risen, so they have increased their prices to us.
However, over the last few months, the exchange rate between the UK Pound and the Swiss Franc has improved, so we have actually been able to offer REDUCED PRICES for almost the whole Glaser range.
You can find our 2016 Catalogue at http://www.blackberrylane.co.uk/PDFs/Cat1601.pdf and our 2016 Price List at http://www.blackberrylane.co.uk/PDFs/prices2016a1.pdf or you can download them from our website.
This may be a good opportunity to buy, as the exchange rate can easily change the other way, plus there may well be the usual rise in postage costs in late March or early April.
Glaser Tools have also introduced a new larger-size Aluminium Adjustable Rake, 96 cm wide with 26 teeth. Sorry, no pictures yet, but it sounds like a larger version of the existing 74 cm/20 tooth and 55 cm/18 tooth ones which have been proving quietly popular since we started stocking them back in 2013.
They also have some new tools planned for 2016. We are awaiting these with interest, and will let you know about them when they arrive.
Monday, 20 April 2015
SAALET Easy Sower
Well, here it is!
A low-cost option for seed sowing of most sizes of vegetable seeds - from Cabbages to French Beans!
It was back in 2002 that we first made contact with Helge Petersen, the inventor of the SAALET Easy Sower. At that time, we were interested to try one out as we had read Eliot Coleman's comments about them in The New Organic Grower and Four Season Harvest.
For whatever reason, that contact did not develop and so it was in 2014 that we started contact with Kenneth at Saalet again, this time with a view to importing the Easy Sower to sell in the UK . . .
. . . and now we have our first batch and have started selling them!
Looks like no-one else in the UK is selling them at the moment, though they have been sold by other merchants in the past. We have them at £24.80 including UK postage, and you can buy them direct 'off the page' at our new SAALET Easy Sower page on the Blackberry Lane website.
A low-cost option for seed sowing of most sizes of vegetable seeds - from Cabbages to French Beans!
It was back in 2002 that we first made contact with Helge Petersen, the inventor of the SAALET Easy Sower. At that time, we were interested to try one out as we had read Eliot Coleman's comments about them in The New Organic Grower and Four Season Harvest.
For whatever reason, that contact did not develop and so it was in 2014 that we started contact with Kenneth at Saalet again, this time with a view to importing the Easy Sower to sell in the UK . . .
. . . and now we have our first batch and have started selling them!
Looks like no-one else in the UK is selling them at the moment, though they have been sold by other merchants in the past. We have them at £24.80 including UK postage, and you can buy them direct 'off the page' at our new SAALET Easy Sower page on the Blackberry Lane website.
Friday, 27 June 2014
Special Offer - Mini 4s and Mini 5s - ALL GONE!
Back in April, when we had an enormous rush for Soil Blockers (Thanks, Monty!), the manufacturers were hard pressed to keep us supplied with enough Mini 4s and Mini 5s to keep up with demand, and we were working day and night to get those orders out.
We survived and, as far as we know, everyone got their Soil Blockers OK. And the orders keep on coming in, so perhaps all those earlier customers are telling their friends . . .
Well, here's a bonus for those of you who have NOT yet bought a Mini 4 or Mini 5 and would like to save some cash.
In the rush of deliveries from the manufacturers, the carriers got a little careless and a total of 10 blockers were damaged - seven Mini 4s and three Mini 5s. The first picture shows you the worst one. Definitely not usable!
But here is the same Mini 4 after a little 'surgery'. As with any operation, there are a few scars, but we are pleased to say that the patient has made a full recovery and should be able to live a fully active life.
If you would like to buy one of these 'unbent' Soil Blockers, we are offering them at £10.00 including UK postage, and of course we will include the usual sets of both long and short Seed Pins, as we do with normal undamaged Blockers.
You won't be able to buy these off our website, so please just email us and we shall send you a PayPal invoice for £10.00. (Or phone us and send a cheque or bank credit transfer.)
All gone now (19th Oct 2014)
We survived and, as far as we know, everyone got their Soil Blockers OK. And the orders keep on coming in, so perhaps all those earlier customers are telling their friends . . .
Well, here's a bonus for those of you who have NOT yet bought a Mini 4 or Mini 5 and would like to save some cash.
In the rush of deliveries from the manufacturers, the carriers got a little careless and a total of 10 blockers were damaged - seven Mini 4s and three Mini 5s. The first picture shows you the worst one. Definitely not usable!
But here is the same Mini 4 after a little 'surgery'. As with any operation, there are a few scars, but we are pleased to say that the patient has made a full recovery and should be able to live a fully active life.
If you would like to buy one of these 'unbent' Soil Blockers, we are offering them at £10.00 including UK postage, and of course we will include the usual sets of both long and short Seed Pins, as we do with normal undamaged Blockers.
You won't be able to buy these off our website, so please just email us and we shall send you a PayPal invoice for £10.00. (Or phone us and send a cheque or bank credit transfer.)
All gone now (19th Oct 2014)
Saturday, 21 June 2014
. . . and the winner is . . .
'Stupice' (apparently pronounced 'stoo-peach-kay') , an early tomato from Eastern Europe. This is the first tomato to (nearly) ripen this year, and the others are following. We should have saleable quantities fairly soon.
How about the deeply ribbed 'Costoluto Genovese' . . .
and the incredible number of flowers on this truss of 'Millefleur'. Looking forward to seeing this full of little yellow cherry tomatoes - apparently very tasty as well.
Meanwhile, one of our Chilli plants is producing, too! Way ahead of all the others, and the Sweet Peppers haven't even started flowering yet!
Aubergines in flower now, so hopefully some fruit before too long,
and the first cucumbers are lengthening.
Watch out for this little fella - a tiny flower, soon to be followed by a miniature cucumber about an inch long. Really crunchy and tasty.
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