Spanish Versus British Allotments Part 2
Some differences between Spanish and British allotments
By Clodagh and Dick Handscombe, members of the Allotment
website who have grown vegetables for a combined 120
years since the age of five including own mini plots,
school vegetable gardens, allotment size vegetable
gardens and eventually a 800 square metre allotment
in Spain where they have lived for twenty years.
This article examining the differences between Spanish alotments and
allotments in the UK is in two parts. The first part
is Spanish Versus British Allotments
Part 1
What else is different between Spain and the UK for allotment growers?
- Many agricultural areas have red or light grey
clay soils. The former can bake rock hard
during sunny spells all the year round unless irrigated
and worked. The grey soils remain more open
and have a greater water holding capacity. This enables crops
such as squash and melons to be grown without
watering after sowing even under the Spanish
sun.
- If one takes over a new allotment the soil will
normally require a major initial improvement
because the traditional annual manuring to lighten
and enrich the soil stopped 10 to 20 years ago when the
keeping of working mules and donkeys and oxen
ceased and the flocks of sheep and goats declined exponentially.
Chemical fertilizers became the norm as villagers
became wealthier but are now becoming overly
expensive in relation to the prices they can
get if crops are sold.
- There are fewer types and varieties of seeds available
and very few sparsely available seed catalogues
for amateur gardeners exist. Traditionally Spaniards
grew few types and only the family/village
varieties handed down over the generations. We aim to use
organic seeds where we can so save our own seeds
where practical, tap into a local government seed bank, use anything
offered to us by locals and fill gaps with
imported seeds.
- Sheep and goat manures were the norm but there
are now more horse stables now opening wanting
to get rid of manure.
- Pelleted chicken manure is not generally available but in
our area there are many commercial chicken
houses where it is possible to buy a few sacks full when they are cleaned
out. However we only use the droppings from
our own ecologically/naturally reared chickens (and then only after
composting for a year) as we are concerned about the possibility
of residual growth hormones and antibiotics in
the litter from the commercial sheds …..commercial
broilers are now reared to kill in 42 days
versus 70 or a 100 only a few years ago!
- Fortunately there is now a wide range of eco fertilizers/growth
promoters, pesticides and fungicides available
to the amateur gardener – possibly
wider than in the UK - having been developed/commercialised
for the export oriented organic vegetable growers.
For interest look up <www.trabe.net>.
- Composting needs more care to prevent heaps from drying out.
As explained in long chapters in each of
our books* the layering of dampened material is essential.
- The generally benign climate can lead to long growing and
harvesting seasons. For instance leaf crops
can be planted out in the autumn and will over winter without going
to seed until the hotter weather of spring.
Raspberries we harvest on the same canes from May until November
and if we are lucky into January.
However one has to watch out for widely yo-yoing
daily temperatures and between successive days
especially during the winter and early spring.
Winter does not change to spring as gradually as in the
UK. Indeed it is possible to experience several winter/spring/winter
sandwiches between December and April. We have
experienced minus five to plus thirty in that period
and summer temperatures up to 47 degrees centigrade although
above the mid thirties is unusual except in Almeria and
Andalucia where 50 degrees is possible!
- We may get less rain but when it comes it can be for days
at a time in the spring and autumn and of
monsoon proportions. The heaviest days rainfall we have experienced
is 67 centimetres in a day with 28 centimetres in
an hour! Inland tennis ball sized hail stones
can be a problem but the last fell in our village 24 years ago
when the cars of the day ended up with badly
dented roofs which were still around when we moved to Spain.
- If one asks a Spaniard when he is going to sow
or plant out X or Y he will often reply with
a saints day or in relation to the current cycle of the moon.
The elderly men still keeping up allotments – our
neighbour is 91 in a few weeks time and has worked
his land every day since the age of ten -
were well versed in the rudiments of the lunar
calendar. But as with most, he has no one interested
in keeping his allotment going or even helping
him out at weekends. So his accumulated historic
agricultural knowledge will die with him and
his land laid to waste until swallowed up in
a future building boom.
The long
term vision of our mountain village is that all
the current agricultural/allotment land will eventually
be reclassified as urbanisable land with the already
abandoned olive, almond and grape terraces on the
mountainsides being given a ‘preservation’ status
allowing them to go back to the primeval state
when the first inhabitants moved into caves in
the valley 29.000 years ago and started tilling
the land on early allotments long before AD.
- The need for more allotments becomes more urgent
as more and more small scale and large scale
agriculturalists cut back or even stop production.
What were self sufficient villages now rely almost entirely
on vegetables from other areas of Spain and imports.
The reasons are the recent increases in the price of seeds,
fertilizers, insecticides, fungicides, herbicides
and tractor/lorry fuels as a result of the oil crisis, the low
prices paid to growers which do not go up even
though supermarket prices do and the allocation of more and more
land for more profitable bio-fuel crops to meet
the governments objective for more oil self sufficiency – apparently
seen to be more important than food self
sufficiency.
- In our area Spaniards find it odd that Clodagh
works our allotment for as many hours as
Dick however along the Galician coast it is the tradition that
women work the huertos/allotments while the
men are away fishing or in the navy.
- Even without allotments more and more people are starting
to grow at least a few vegetables in their gardens
or on apartment terraces. To show what can be done
and to have photographs for the book we grew eighteen vegetables
in a one square metre mini allotment –a
collection of plastic tubs and pots – on one of our terraces two
summers ago. Where there’s a will there’s a way!
We have now written six books re gardening in Spain
including the best seller Growing
Healthy Vegetables in Spain – ISBN
978-84-89954-53-3 and have a regular radio programme
on Spanish radio. If you are interested in growing
vegetables in the Mediterranean climate or more ideas
for growing in a globally warmed southern England
the book can be obtained most easily in the UK from
Amazon
© Clodagh and Dick Handscombe May 2008.
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