I dug over four of the raised beds and used my home-made compost to cover two of them.


My parsnip bed is being left without compost until the spring.

This is the potato bed all dug over and covered in my best compost.

Three lovely beds ready for the season to start.

Three not quite so lovely beds. The garlic bed which needs hoeing again, the middle bed which needs digging over/weeding and covering in compost. The last bed has been half covered in shop bought peat free compost and I'll probably add more shop bought and see if there is a difference between that and my home-made. That bed is for my salad leaves and lettuce.
No comments:
Post a Comment