So, as many of you no, we try to improve our place a little every year. Something that has been on our wish list for a while has been a "walk in" fruit cage.
We have reviewed sizes, sites and options. Our initial thoughts were to build one out of wood. Subsequent investigations showed that it would be cheaper to buy one than buy the pieces. It then proved to be cheaper still to buy aluminium - which came with a ten year warranty compared to the five years for wood. So aluminium it will be.
We did the usual thing we do with pegs and string, working out size, orientation, relationships to other features, access etc. It is important for example to be able to get a tractor in to flail cut that hedge you can see so we must maintain wide access on that side.
Pegged Out Area by British Red, on Flickr
We also needed to leave a good access path to the raised bed for rotovators, wheelbarrows and the like
Proximity to veg beds by British Red, on Flickr
It ended up that a 9 x 4 meter size fits our ever dwindling space best. In the shot below, you can see how it relates to the "mini orchard". To the right is where I am putting in the chicken run.
Half Moon and Spade by British Red, on Flickr
I set to with a half moon and spade to dig out the turf by the string marker
Digging Out by British Red, on Flickr
The spade shown has a longer than normal handle and is a gods sent to those of us with aging backs. Picking up the turf still gets old though. I have some fleece lined cloth gloves with a rubber coating that are warm and waterproof but allow some feeling in the fingers. They are amazing when it hovering around freezing and you are grubbing in the soil. Even so by the time I was half way round I was ready for a cuppa.
Halfway Round by British Red, on Flickr
I managed to get all the way around by the time the sun was setting.
Edge Marked by British Red, on Flickr
Now I just have to hand dig out four hundred square feet of grass
. It would be a lot easier if I hired a turf cutter - but then we would spend money that is better spent on the cage itself. So I will spend a couple of weeks digging a "strip" out of the square every time I have an hour to spare.
It does amuse me, when grubbing in the mud in gloves that all those people who tell us how "lucky" we are to live like this, should try spending all day in unheated barns or digging in mud and hard frost
More as it happens.
Red
We have reviewed sizes, sites and options. Our initial thoughts were to build one out of wood. Subsequent investigations showed that it would be cheaper to buy one than buy the pieces. It then proved to be cheaper still to buy aluminium - which came with a ten year warranty compared to the five years for wood. So aluminium it will be.
We did the usual thing we do with pegs and string, working out size, orientation, relationships to other features, access etc. It is important for example to be able to get a tractor in to flail cut that hedge you can see so we must maintain wide access on that side.

We also needed to leave a good access path to the raised bed for rotovators, wheelbarrows and the like

It ended up that a 9 x 4 meter size fits our ever dwindling space best. In the shot below, you can see how it relates to the "mini orchard". To the right is where I am putting in the chicken run.

I set to with a half moon and spade to dig out the turf by the string marker

The spade shown has a longer than normal handle and is a gods sent to those of us with aging backs. Picking up the turf still gets old though. I have some fleece lined cloth gloves with a rubber coating that are warm and waterproof but allow some feeling in the fingers. They are amazing when it hovering around freezing and you are grubbing in the soil. Even so by the time I was half way round I was ready for a cuppa.

I managed to get all the way around by the time the sun was setting.

Now I just have to hand dig out four hundred square feet of grass

It does amuse me, when grubbing in the mud in gloves that all those people who tell us how "lucky" we are to live like this, should try spending all day in unheated barns or digging in mud and hard frost

More as it happens.
Red