Hello Everyone,
Bob and I hope you are all very well. This week has felt like the season we are actually in…Autumn. We have had some cold days (and nights). The fire is on and thermals are at the ready…
The Farm
On Monday we had an enjoyable visit from a group of young growers from Cumbria. They came with their leader who is advising them on all things growing including growing as a business. They were on a field trip and also visited Gibside Gardens.
They all had great garden knowledge, some volunteered at farms, some had farms, some small growing areas. They mostly wanted to understand the importance of ‘how to run it as a business’. Both Bob and I thoroughly enjoy gardening and achieving, however, we have also instinctively used our combined business knowledge to run the farm.
The group were clearly enthusiastic about the way of life they are following. But, to continue working physically as hard as us growers do, particularly small scale growers with little mechanical help, growers need to realise that this life also needs to provide a living salary. We hope we were of some help and good luck to them all!
It has been a great working week here on the farm. There is always lots to do with a tick list of duties at the beginning of each week. This last week the Crew have been really busy with the weather being on our side....mostly. More potatoes were harvested and some were massive! See them in the Chef’s Box soon. The restaurants and boxes were all attended to with harvesting, prepping, packing and delivering on a daily basis. The last of the tomatoes are now harvested, stored and ready for use. The spaces left are being filled with more overwintering onions, coriander and chervil.
Where the potatoes were, the beds have been levelled and covered with a specific weed suppressing sheet. This particular weed suppressing sheet we keep using each year…it has small holes which are melted in a regular pattern.....specifically for growing garlic. After the sheet goes down the next year's garlic is planted, and I am delighted to say the garlic is in!

The outside beds of brassicas are being removed as they are harvested and the remains sent to the compost bins. These beds are being prepped and covered , ready for the next planting. All three outside herb gardens have been cut back, weeded and ready for the next growing season. Some plants, for instance sage, are not cut back but left to protect the plant from frosts. Generally speaking the herb gardens look quite bare for the Autumn and Winter seasons. This makes us appreciate when they are in full bloom.
All in all a very productive week.
The Walled Garden
The garden is much the same, but with the crops getting much bigger in the greenhouse. The building activities on the major build has fluctuations in resource usage and when there is an opportunity the builder switches activities to the garden. So we expect that between now and Christmas there will be an opportunity to move to the next stage of the garden development. This will be exciting. Watch this space…
Each morning the team meets for a coffee/tea and a chat before we start on the activities for the day. This last week we have been running through the lists of duties for over the coming months…guttering, strawberry beds, polytunnels all popped up in the chats. There will always be tasks to complete what ever the season. With more work being carried out in the walled garden and chores on a list at the farm…it never stops but we wouldn’t want to. As much as we treat this adventure as a business it is also our way of life.
Bob and I have always enjoyed ‘doing’, probably because our parents were ‘doers’. We have instilled our work ethic into our children and now, we are hoping…the grandchildren follow with this approach.
Speaking of which, I am with our granddaughter in Amsterdam on a mini weekend break while Bob holds the fort in the Shire and watching the grandsons playing football. Yes I am enjoying myself and I hope you are too.
Till next week, tot ziens,
Ann