January jobs to do in the allotment, greenhouse and all around the garden
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| A stiff wire brush will remove the worst of rust from traditional cloches
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'Add well-rotted manure to borders and beds and rake over lightly.
Around the garden
BIRDS: Feed them in cold weather. They are great allies in the gardenand it is hard for them to find food when the ground is frozen.
BORDERS: If soil conditions allow, finish off any maintenance such as forking over, weeding and mulching. Shred any material cut from herbaceous plants during autumn.
CLOCHES: Repair glass, if necessary, and clean them. Remove rust with a stiff wire brush, then paint the frames for a really tidy look.
DECIDUOUS TREES: Winter prune them as required, removing crossing or rubbing branches, cutting out diseased wood and shortening over-long branches.
FALLEN LEAVES: Keep gathering them to make leaf mould. Where there are a lot, prioritise collecting them from lawns, rockeries and – for safety's sake – paths and steps.
PAVED AREAS: Clean them now to save time once the growing season gets underway - a pressure washer speeds up the task.
PERENNIALS: Tidy through them, cutting back where required.
PONDS AND WATER FEATURES: Top them up in dry weather. Pebbles in water features can look grubby, but soapy water and a scrubbing brush will work wonders.
WISTERIA: Winter prune.
WOODEN WALKWAYS: Fix fine-mesh chicken wire to these areas, including decking and railway sleepers. This should stop anyone from slipping.
In the greenhouse
CLEAN: Disinfect the windows and surfaces and give a general good clean.
CONSERVATORY PLANTS: Deadhead them and remove old leaves. Water sparingly as required.
HARDY CROPS: Move previously sown garlic, endive, beetroot, broad beans, lettuce and peas out of the heated greenhouse and into a polytunnel to harden off.
HEATERS: Check they are working efficiently. If not, take them to a service agent or electrician.
HERBACEOUS SEEDS: Sow these into modules.
SEED POTATOES Chit them by simply placing them in a light but frost-free place to sprout.
SOWING SEED: Follow my easy guide to sowing veg seeds with recommended varieties to try.
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| Bring crops on early with a hox box
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On the allotment
APPLES AND PEARS: Winter prune these trees, if you haven't done so already.
BROAD BEANS: Cut the tops off those being grown as a green manure crop and dig them in.
BRUSSELS SPROUTS: Harvest the last of these. Remove the plant debris and div over the vacated area.
CROP ROTATION: Plan this for your annual veg, so you can prevent a build up of soil problems. The crop families are made up of:
- brassicas
add lime to the soil if it is acid. Grow brassicas in earth that was manured for the previous crop (they need a lot of fertiliser)
- onion family
grow in earth that was manured for the previous crop. Add a small amount of fertiliser. Do not water
- pea family
these crops need organic matter, but very little fertiliser
- potatoes
apply a moderate fertiliser and organic matter if available, but no lime
- root crops
do not dig in manure, give little fertiliser and not much watering
DIGGING: Finish off, if you haven't already, providing the conditions are suitable. Don't dig if the soil if frozen, solid or waterlogged. Cover dug ground with polythene.
GRAPE VINES: Prune by cutting back all shoots coming from the main framework back to two buds.
HOT BOX: This Victorian idea uses heat from manure to obtain earlier crops. To make one, fill a wooden compost bin with fresh horse manure, Cap it with a 10cm (4in) layer of garden compost and add a cloche. If you already have one, empty it and spread the now well-rotted horse manure over the brassica bed.
LEEKS: Dig a trench and plant. If the weather freezes the ground, there will still be some to harvest.
MANURE: Add well-rotted manure to borders and beds and rake over lightly.
SEEDS AND YOUNG PLANTS: Order these now if you haven't done so already, including fruit plants. Mail-order specialists will have the most choice.
SHREDDING: Shred woody garden waste and add to the compost heap.
WEEDING: Have a general tidy up and weed around fruit trees and bushes. Clear any old crops and add them to the compost heap. As well as conventional bins made from wood, we have tried making compost containers from bricks. They do work, but they are time-consuming to make.
Look further
Nick and Sue Hamilton run
Barnsdale Gardens in Rutland, Leicestershire, formerly owned by the late Geoff Hamilton.
* Photography: Redshift Photography