I googled 'hotbed' to get a definition:
hotbed : noun
| |
Having trawled through all of them, I set to and gathered up the following materials:
- a great big* pile of steaming fresh** horse manure - I reckon I had about 2 cubic metres.
- * you need a reasonable volume for this to work.
- ** it has to be fresh to generate heat.
- some faggots of tree prunings - suggested by some writers as a way of building up the structure if you'e a bit short of manure.
- as many barrowloads of beech leaves as I could be bothered to rake up - some accounts suggest adding leaves as a way to temper the fierce heat of the manure.
...so here is my step by step 'hotbed photo guide':
Build up the edges of each layer first then fill in the middle -
make sure it's all firmed down so that it doesn't sink unevenly.
Fill the frame with about 20cm depth of soil/compost mix.
I have a fancy glazed 'light' to go on top of the frame, but old window units would work just as well.
The heat should start to build up rapidly over the next few days - the books say that you should wait for the temperature to stabilise somewhere in the region of 21-23 Celsius before sowing seeds. This seems wildly ambitious at the moment, but who am I to doubt the wisdom of the ancients? I have stuck a thermometer in and will report on progress - I feel a chart coming on....
you are a genius and this is a thing of beauty.
ReplyDeletewhy thank you miss Sian - I've been taking its temp like an over anxious parent.
DeleteYour pile of you-know-what, actually looks kind-of 'beautiful'
ReplyDeleteNot showy like a rose - but it does have its own special charm!
DeleteOver the past few weeks i have been helping to build approx 10 large hotbeds, measuring about 6 x 12ft it has been back breaking work! the sides are built with scaffold boards and salvaged metal sheets. on top sits a frame structure with 3 removable 'lights' - basic window frames with polytunnel plastic attached. The result has been staggering, seeds seem to grow at an astonishing rate. We have also built a hot wayer system with some tanks surrounded by manure, this has provided lovely warm water
ReplyDeleteWow - that sounds impressive! Having access to a lot of manure that you don't have to transport very far must be really important when you're working on that scale.
ReplyDeleteGosh that is an amazing piece of work. Who would have guessed twigs, leaves and poo could be so helpful?
ReplyDeleteIf it was a bit bigger I think I would have got in there this morning! -2 in the garden, 16 degrees in the hotbed. Planning to sow some seeds in there this week.
Delete