The school holidays can be a difficult time for garden care, particularly in summer in unpredictable weather. Some plants will run to seed if not picked; others produce giants (courgettes) or become coarse and tough (beans). In dry spells, plants can stop growing, or die completely. Weeds will also grow quickly. It’s best to have a plan.
Involving the community
Involve the garden club and community volunteers to create a rota for picking produce, watering and ventilating greenhouses. Volunteers are also helpful to keep on top of weeding. Have clear responsibilities among the group and a few contingency plans.
Your school may also have a caretaker and/or site management team who would be willing to help in the holidays. It’s even better if some pupils and parents can continue to help with the garden, giving them the satisfaction of seeing the plants right through the season. Whoever helps, make sure they are thanked and recognised, maybe through the school newsletter and website.
Harvesting
Ideally choose crop varieties that can be sown or harvested either side of school holidays. See Food Growing Instruction Cards and the Organic Gardening Catalogue. Before a holiday, harvest all the crops that are ready. Others will last through the holidays if they were well cared for earlier and are growing well, eg pumpkins, potatoes and winter cabbages. Other crops will need regular attention, eg watering and picking tomatoes, courgettes and beans.
Weeding
Covering the soil surface with a ‘mulch’ is a great way to suppress weed growth by excluding light. Mulches include water-permeable membrane and thick layers (5-10cm) of organic matter such as leafmould (rotted leaves). Grass clippings are also useful, but don’t use clippings from grass treated with weed killer.
Watering
Learn how to water plants during the holidays to get the best harvest with the least amount of time and water. For example, once young pea plants are growing strongly, only water after they start flowering to ‘swell’ the pods. Watering beforehand produces leafy growth without any increase in yield. By contrast, plants like Brussels sprouts rarely need watering once established unless there is prolonged dry weather. When you do water, apply it where plants need it, at the roots. Water thoroughly, but less often. This discourages surface rooting that will be dependent on you for water and vulnerable to drought (far more than deeper roots). You can also conserve moisture using the same mulches as for weed control (above). Mulch wet soil to help ‘lock in’ the moisture beneath, watering beforehand if needed.
Using green manures
Sow seeds of green manure if you have areas of bare soil, eg after harvesting crops. These useful plants keep the soil covered to suppress weeds and conserve moisture. They also hold on to plant nutrients in the soil to stop them from leaching and improve structure and fertility when dug in.
Ensure anyone helping in the garden during holidays is aware of school access and safety procedures and familiar with specific known hazards in the garden. Always inform the school site manager about what’s happening.
Weeding
Covering the soil surface with a ‘mulch’ is a great way to suppress weed growth by excluding light. Mulches include water-permeable membrane and thick layers (5-10cm) of organic matter such as leafmould (rotted leaves). Grass clippings are also useful, but don’t use clippings from grass treated with weed killer.
Watering
Learn how to water plants during the holidays to get the best harvest with the least amount of time and water. For example, once young pea plants are growing strongly, only water after they start flowering to ‘swell’ the pods. Watering beforehand produces leafy growth without any increase in yield. By contrast, plants like Brussels sprouts rarely need watering once established unless there is prolonged dry weather. When you do water, apply it where plants need it, at the roots. Water thoroughly, but less often. This discourages surface rooting that will be dependent on you for water and vulnerable to drought (far more than deeper roots). You can also conserve moisture using the same mulches as for weed control (above). Mulch wet soil to help ‘lock in’ the moisture beneath, watering beforehand if needed.
Using green manures
Sow seeds of green manure if you have areas of bare soil, eg after harvesting crops. These useful plants keep the soil covered to suppress weeds and conserve moisture. They also hold on to plant nutrients in the soil to stop them from leaching and improve structure and fertility when dug in.
Ensure anyone helping in the garden during holidays is aware of school access and safety procedures and familiar with specific known hazards in the garden. Always inform the school site manager about what’s happening.
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