
3 minute read
SUSSEX FREE RANGE EGGS
Buy from the hens at Riverside Farm, Laundry Lane, Vines Cross. Also available at Pomfrets Butchers, Spar Broad Oak & Davies & Son.
Tel 01435 812588
CONSUMER ADVICE: KEEP REFRIGERATED AFTER PURCHASE
Riverside Farm, Laundry Lane, Vines Cross, East Sussex TN21 9ED
Egg stamping explanation
0 = Organic, 1 = Free Range, 2 = Barn, 3 = Cage, UK = Origin, 99999 = Producer ID
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March is one of the busier months of the year in the garden and it is a good thing to be kept busy during the long gloom of Lent.
The planting of deciduous trees, shrubs, fruits and roses should be completed as soon as possible to give them a chance to get a grip of the soil before drought may punish them. In a warm sheltered border we may be planting evergreens such as Laurels, conifers, hollies, azaleas and rhododendrons. Most herbaceous perennials can also be planted now. Rose pruning should be carried on and finished by the Ides, subject to the weather; better not to prune during a period of heavy frost. Hybrid tea roses may be pruned back to five or so buds with all sickly and dead wood cut away. Climbing roses should have their side branches cut back to two buds. It is worth feeding the roses with a dedicated rose fertiliser now as the leaves are making their first appearance and spraying with a fungicide from now until June should keep the leaves looking clean all season. Unlike most bulbous-rooted plants, snowdrops will benefit from being lifted and divided every few years as the clumps can become over- crowded, leading to a mass of blind shoots. In the vegetable garden we should be aiming first at the creation of the all-important fine tilth. As always, the weather is master/mistress. The soil should be visibly drying; better to wait until the end of the month or beyond before sowing a seed if there is any hint of stickiness. The reader will have dug over the plot thoroughly last autumn, digging in barrowfuls of ungulate droppings, compost, shoddy and celebrity magazines. The floods and gales of winter will have weathered the diggings down to an uneven crumbly surface. Patient raking eventually renders our seed bed smooth and fine, air pockets being trodden out as we go. We might allow ourselves five minutes leaning on the rake indulging in a short pipe and a gloat over our seed bed, well prepared and superior to next door's. Only now may we sow The first sowings may be of peas, leeks, parsnips (always use new seed), broad beans, parsley, spinach and radishes, onion and shallot sets may be planted nearer the end of the month, a trowel is better than a dibber for these as any compaction encourages them to wriggle free of the ground. Garlic may still be planted but no time should be lost. New beds of Thyme, Tarragon, Mint and other herbs may be planted out towards the middle of Lent. Early potatoes to go in around St.Patrick's Day, six inches down, these early plantings will run some risk from frost but it is good to see the neat rows of tight foliage as soon as possible and any frost-blackened shoots will soon be replaced. The older gardening books advised to carry around a bale of straw at all times during March and early April to spread over tender shoots in the case of a late frost.
For those who commune with the moon and garden by her phases and the biodynamic system of lunar planting, root crops to be planted or sown during the waning gibbous, from the 7th to the 21st.
The rows for runner beans may be prepared now, this should involve digging in barrowfuls of compost or horsey stuff a foot and a half down and allowed to settle down over the next six to eight weeks before sowing.
After such exercises in self-sufficiency we may repair to the shed to indulge yet another self-satisfied long pipe and a leisurely rumination over the coming vernal equinox when all the denizens of the planet go about their business under a day and night of equal length across the globe.
River Mead Nursery
Foords Lane, Vines Cross, Horam, East Sussex TN21 9HB
Telephone No. 01435 813353 Email – info@rivermeadnursery.co.uk

Website - www.rivermeadnursery.co.uk
We have a wide selection of plants:Bedding Plants, Herbs, Vegetable Plants, Perennials, Shrubs, Fruit Bushes, Fruit Trees, Ornamental Trees, Grasses, Cacti, Agaves. Also available –
Home grown produce (seasonal vegetables, herbs, fruit, cut flowers and eggs).
Opening Times: Winter 9am-dusk Monday - Saturday









Heathfield & Horam Repair Café: Next session on 11 March.

We meet on the second Saturday of every month (except August), 9:30 am – 12 noon, Horam Village Hall, A267, Horam TN21 0JE https://www.facebook.com/RepairCafeTN21 https://sites.google.com/view/heathfieldrepaircafe/home?pli=1
We hope to see you! Help us preserve our environment and dent our throw-away culture. Everyone is welcome and all services are free, but donations are welcome. Yummy home-baked cakes and refreshments while you wait!
On most occasions we will be able to repair: Computers ~ Electrical items ~ Cycles ~ Minor mechanical problems ~ Furniture ~ Small Sewing repairs
