Showing posts with label Competition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Competition. Show all posts

Wednesday, 22 October 2014

Pumpkins Galore!

With pumpkin season well under way this is a timely reminder of an Allotment Pumpkin Challenge organised by the City of York Council. If you believe your pumpkins have what it takes, then why not pick up the gauntlet and get in touch with Darren Lovatt the council's Allotment Officer and register your interest. Judging takes place on 1st November, so don't delay... darren.lovatt@york.gov.uk







































The photo below shows an impressive display of pumpkins laid out and hardening off at our local Brunswick organic nursery in Bishopthorpe. To see them in the flesh why not pop along to their 'Pumpple Festival' this Sunday 26th October, when they will be celebrating all things 'pumpkintastic' and 'applicious'. How can you not resist!!!
http://www.brunswickyork.org.uk/


Tuesday, 21 June 2011

Allotment Plot Competition 2011

Posted on behalf of Judith Ward, York Allotments Officer

Dear Allotment Gardeners

Thank you to those people who have sent in nominations for this year's Allotment Competition.  If you've not done so yet, there's still time to nominate plots or to enter your own plot for judging.  Entries and nominations will be accepted up to Friday June 24th.

You can send your nominations by e-mail to allotments@york.gov.uk 

The competition celebrates the skill, hard work and imagination of York’s allotment gardeners.   Is there a plot near yours that cheers up passers by with its flowers, or keeps  several families in fruit and veg?  Have you overcome brambles, docks and thistles on your plot to establish a garden you can be proud of?

Plots will be judged in June and July by a team of allotment site secretaries.  The judges will score each plot on variety and health of the crops, the layout and maintenance of the plot and any special features.  If you’d like a copy of the score sheet please contact Sue Harvey on (01904 553433).

This year the judges have also been invited to recommend plots that deserve special recognition; maybe a new tenant who has transformed a derelict plot in a single season, an older gardener who has kept up high standards over many years or an outstanding community garden.    If you’d like to nominate a plot for special recognition, please give the reasons why this allotment garden is out of the ordinary.

Once again we are very grateful to the competition sponsors.   Brunswick Organic Nursery, Deans Garden Centre and Vertigrow Plant Nursery have all donated vouchers and Nick Milner will be supplying a set of traditional bean poles for each of four area winners.

Prizes will be presented at a special event at the Guildhall, during National Allotments Week in August.


Tuesday, 24 August 2010

Hospital Field Best Plot Competition winner 2010

Sally Ann Gatus and her daughter, Laura
Sally-Ann Gatus, the winner of the Best Plot Competition 2010 on Hospital Field, is a real allotment inspiration. When she first took on her plot in October 1996 it only had a few ancient gooseberry bushes on it. Now it is a haven of vegetables, fruit, herbs, flowers and wildlife. When she came to the site, her style of gardening, such as introducing a pond and an herb garden, was viewed with suspicion by some. One of her neighbours, now no longer a plotholder, used to make comments such as ‘what on earth are you doing lass, what do you want with a herb garden?’ and ‘you are supposed to plant in rows.’ Times have changes now and her organic practices, recycling and encouragement of wildlife are far more common on the site.


Though Sally is certainly the principal gardener on her plot she is often joined by her husband Kevin, children Laura and Angus and various friends and their children from Dringhouses Primary School where Sally has been running the gardening club for the last 2 years. She loves her Hospital Field plot and this enthusiasm has definitely rubbed on her kids. Sally has been very creative in the way she has involved and interested them in the plot. She believes in putting the kids in their old clothes and just letting them get dirty, ‘they love to build dens and they love to pick. And I think it is really important for them to be aware of nature and of plants and where food comes from’. However, she doesn’t stop at just letting the kids help on the plot. Sally told me one of the ways she kept her kids entertained, ‘My kids are really into fossils and crystals so one day I came down and cleared an area of the plot, I buried a plastic dinosaur head and marked the area up with string in a grid. I then gave the kids brushes and trowels and told them it was an archaeological dig. They absolutely loved it.’


As a keen recycler, she brings her vegetable waste from home and uses torn up cardboard and leaves to mulch her plants. She has even created a cloche from the frame of swing her kids have grown out of.  Her composting is really impressive too. She bags up all her tops and leaves them at one end of the plot for at least 6 months, then in April or May she digs trenches and digs it all back into the soil. The perennial weeds she drowns and makes into a weed tea to feed to the plants, the woody material she tends to chop up with secateurs and add to her path and once a year, around the 5th of November, she has a bonfire with the kids.

Sally often saves seeds from this year’s crops to sow in the next. Those seeds she doesn’t use or eat she uses to make homemade fat balls. She shared her recipe with me. The ingredients change according to what she has around but the basics are bacon rind, bread, old breakfast cereal, old seed, lard – you break up the lard into pieces and mix it into the other ingredients, you then press the mixture into pine cone and tie them to the trees.

Finally, her best piece advice, which she received when new to allotment gardening is ‘don’t water too early in the season because the plants will get used to it and when you have a dry spell they won’t have developed decent roots.’ That seems to me to be more useful advice than ‘you are supposed to plant in rows’.

N.B. I am still trying to get hold of the Hob Moor winner, Mrs Valerie Warren, for a similar article on her.  If you know her please ask her to get in touch with me.  Caroline Bush

Sunday, 15 August 2010

Profile of the Best Plot Competition SOUTH area winner

Malcolm and Gill Wignall Plot 33 Scarcroft are the winners of the City of York Council's Best Plot Competition 2010 for the South area i.e. the area which covers Scarcroft, Hob Moor and Hospital Fields.  I visited them on their plot to find out about them, the way they garden and what I might learn from their success.

Malcolm and Gill Wignall


















According to Malcolm, he does 10% of the work and Gill does 90%.  She says he is good at mowing, edging and cooking, particularly cooking.  He says she is good at all the rest of it.  They have worked this plot on Scarcroft for the last 7 years, but have shared other plots on the site before that.  Gill told me that when she was first offered this plot, Janice, the previous site secretary, offered her one that was immaculately dug over and one that was a solid mass of creeping buttercup but had a lavender hedge and a plum tree.  The lavender hedge swung it.   It took her 4 years to get all of the plot under cultivation and flowers still play a large part of Gill's plot which she describes more as an vegetable garden. 

She loves every aspect of having an allotment, except the occasional thefts.  She is even keen on digging, 'I love the way a patch of land looks a mess and then you dig it over and all of a sudden it's all orderly and ready'.  Gill is a committed organic gardener and over the years she has worked on improving the condition of her clay soil with compost and manure.  The two main pieces of advice she would give to anyone new to vegetable gardening - 'get on top of the weeds and improve your soil'.  This year she says she has been really pleased with the Lady Chrystl potatoes recommended to her by the men in the allotment shop and her white dwarf beans. She described her approach to allotment gardening as 'I like to do a bit of everything, but I don't get too worried.  I like to try things but if it doesn't work I go on to something else.'  Well, from the look of her and Malcolm's plot something is definitely working!  Congratulations to them both.

Gill and Malcolm are happy for other plotholders to come and visit their plot, but please only go onto it if they are around.

I hope to post up similar interviews with the winners from Hob Moor and Hospital Fields but as neither of them are association members it is taking me a little longer to get in touch with them. 

Caroline Bush

Friday, 13 August 2010

Winners of the 2010 York Best Plot Allotment Competition

We have just received the names of this year's winners.  So congratulations to the following: 
NORTH
Mrs Rebecca Rowan 5B Strensall
Mrs E Joy Taylor 24B Wigginton Road NORTH AREA WINNER

EAST
Miss Martha Moulson 149A Low Moor
Mrs Helen & Mr Paul Sellers 3 Hempland Lane
Mrs Jean Bearpark 37A Glen EAST AREA WINNER

SOUTH
Mrs Valerie Warren 16 Hob Moor

Mrs Valerie Warren
Mr Kevin & Mrs Sally-Ann Gatus 20 Hospital Field

Mrs Sally-Ann Gatus

Mr Malcolm & Mrs Gill Wignall 33 Scarcroft SOUTH AREA WINNER

Mrs Gill Wignall

WEST
Mr Ambery & Mrs Susan Dew 16 Carr
Mr Steve Jones & Mr Geoff Pearson 14 Holgate
Mrs Sarah West 21C Howe Hill
Mr Alan Hayes 9 Green Lane
Miss Paula Smith 13 & 16 New Lane WEST AREA WINNER
Beanpoles donated by Nick Milner to be presented to each of the 4 Area Winners

Well done to you all.

Monday, 28 June 2010

The judging criteria for the Best Plot Competition

This is the scoring sheet that the judges will use when assesing the nominated plots.  Thanks to Judith Ward for supplying it.  Please note that if some of the criteria do not apply to your plot (i.e. you don't have any livestock) you will not be marked down.


Sunday, 27 June 2010

Allotment Competition 2010


The deadline for nominations for the 2010 Best Plot competition is 30th June. 

Now we know that some of you may not like the idea of putting yourself forward by displaying a number on your plot and others of you may want to nominate a neighbour but you haven't had the chance to ask them if they mind or not.  Well  don't worry about it too much.  A council insider has told us that once the list of nominations has been compiled the council will give all the nominated plotholders a bell to check that they are ok to be included and to give them the opportunity to pull out.  So you can nominate with impunity.  You can nominate any two plots you like,  and it is perfectly ok for you to nominate yourself.  I know for certain that some plotholders have already done this.  Frankly the whole competition is just for fun so if you want to be involved nominating yourself is absolutely fine.

So just to remind you. You can nominate 2 plots.  All you need to do is write an email to allotments@york.gov.uk. On this email list the allotment site and 2 plot numbers you want to nominate.  You can also say why you nominated them if you like, and you can add your name and site too.  You don't have to put your name and your site, so this means that nominating is not restricted to plotholders.

On Judith Ward's poster, pictured above, she has written that she has more information on the judging criteria.  This hasn't been shared with the association, but as soon as we find it out we will post it here.

Good luck to you all.

Tuesday, 4 May 2010

Council Allotment Newsletter Spring/Summer

Some of our members do not have a plot and some of you garden a plot with people who are not on the tenancy agreement.  These people will not have received a copy of the council's allotment newsletter so I have reproduced it here for you.  It's not a terribly high res version so if you can't read it let, first click on each page to make it bigger but if you still can't read that let me know on scarcroftallotments@live.co.uk and I will email you a copy.  As usual it contains lots of interesting information about what is going on across all the council's sites.

Caroline





Saturday, 3 October 2009

Best Plot Southern Area Winners



Pictured here are the winners of the City of York's Best Plot Competition 2009 for the Southern area, Sammy and Ming Kee standing in front of their plot on Scarcroft Road site.  Their plot is always an inspiration. They have almost entirely cleared their plot for the winter already.  I wish I was that well organised!

Sunday, 20 September 2009

Praise All Round



Individual plot holders were not the only winners in the City of York Council's recent Best Plot competition.  Our association also won a collective prize.  The prize was awarded for all the work we have done over the last few years to reinvigorate our three allotments and to create a community spirit including producing our regular newsletter Dig This, the Glut Gourmet cookbook and allotment calendar and promoting the allotment competition.  Well done us!  If you are so in awe of this certificate you can see the real thing in the hut.

Wednesday, 9 September 2009

Winners of the 2009 Allotment Competition

The results of York Council's Best Plot Competition 2009 are in!

Congratulations go to the following:

NORTH
Mrs Audrey Calvert 10A Strensall NORTH AREA WINNER
Ms Sandra Geere 7 Wigginton Terrace
Miss Lindsay Atkinson & Mr Peter Townsend 5 Wigginton Road


EAST
Mr John & Mrs Ann Harper 8 Glen JOINT EAST AREA WINNER
Mrs Diana Quinn 18 Hempland Lane JOINT EAST AREA WINNER
Mr Paul & Mrs Helen Sellers (runner up) 3 Hempland Lane
Mr Carlton Hirst 97B Low Moor
Mrs Judy Hodgson 10 Fulford Road

SOUTH
Mrs Margaret Barthorpe 10 Hob Moor
Ms Ruth Hodgins (runner up) 17B Hospital Field
Mrs Julia Mander 25 Hospital Field
Mr Sammy Kee 94 Scarcroft SOUTH AREA WINNER
Mrs Anthea Brigstocke (runner up) 114 Scarcroft

WEST
Mr Alan Roughton & Miss Julie McGuigan 2 Carr
Mr Robert Almond 37B Green Lane
Miss Christine Bishop 8 Holgate WEST AREA WINNER



http://www.thepress.co.uk/search/4549099.City_of_York_Council_s_Allotment_Awards_grow_again/