January Gardening
Work in the garden during the opening month of the year is entirely dependent on the
weather, and it is futile to enter on a vain conflict with Nature. When heavy rains
prevail keep off the ground, but immediately it will bear traffic without poaching be
prepared to take advantage of every favourable hour.
Much may be done in January to make ready for the busy spring, and every moment
usefully employed will relieve the pressure later on. Survey the stock of pea-sticks, haul
out all the rubbish from the yard, and make a 'smother' of waste prunings and heaps of
twitch and other stuff for which there is no decided use. If properly done, the result
will be a black ash of the most fertilising nature, such as a mere fire will not produce.
Should the soil be frost-bound wheel out manure and lay it in heaps ready to be spread
and dug in where seed-beds are to be made. If the weather is open and dry, trench spare
plots and make ready well-manured plots for sowing Peas and Beans.
So far as may be convenient, all preparatory work should be pushed on with vigour, and
every effort must be made to lay up as much land in the rough as possible; for the more it
is frozen through the greater will be its fertility, and the more beautiful, as well as
more abundant, the crops.
It is a matter of the most ordinary prudence to be prepared to resist the shock of a
severe frost. When this event occurs, many suffer loss because they are not prepared for
it. Good brick walls and substantial roofs are needed for the safe keeping of fruits and
the more valuable kinds of roots; but when rough methods are resorted to, such as clamping
and pitting, there should be a large body of stuff employed, for a prolonged frost will
find its way through any thin covering, no matter what the material may be. As there is
not much to do now out of doors, it is a good time to look over the notes which were made
concerning various crops in the past season, and to attend to the seed list.
Seed sowing should be practised with exceeding caution; but great things may be done
where there are warm, sheltered, dry borders, and suitable appliances for screening and
forwarding early crops. Under these favourable conditions, we advise the sowing of small
breadths of a few choice subjects towards the end of the month; and, this being done,
every care should be taken to nurse the seedlings through the trying times that are before
them.
Such things as tender young Radishes, Onions, small Salads, Spinach, Cabbage, and
Carrots never come in too early; the trouble often is that they are seen in the market
while as yet they are invisible in the garden. Hedges of Hornbeam, Laurel, or Holly, to
break the force of the wind, are valuable for sheltering early borders, and walls are
great aids to earliness by the warmth they reflect and the dryness they promote.
The soil for these early crops should be light and rich, and the position extra well
drained, to prevent the slightest accumulation of water during heavy rains. Supposing you
have such a border, sow upon it, as early as weather will permit, any of the smaller sorts
of Cabbage Lettuce, Onion, Long Scarlet Radish, Round Spinach, Cabbage, and Carrot.
All these crops may be grown in frames with greater safety, and in many exposed places
the warm border is almost an impossibility. Reed hurdles and loose dry litter should be
always ready when early cropping is in hand; and old lights, and even old doors, and any
and every kind of screen may be made use of at times to protect the early seed-beds from
snow, severe frost, and the dry blast of an east wind.
Forcing is one of the fine arts in the English garden. It is an art easily
acquired up to a certain point, but beyond that point full of difficulty. Every step in
this business is a conflict with Nature, and in such a conflict the devices of man must
occasionally fail.
A golden rule is to be found in the proverb 'The more haste the less speed.' Whatever
the source of heat, it should be moderate at first, and should be augmented slowly. The
earlier the forced articles are required the more careful should be the preparation for
them, and the more moderate the temperature in the first instance. There must be at
command a constant as well as sufficient temperature: when a forced crop has made some
progress a check will be fatal to success.
The beginner should acquire experience with Rhubarb and Sea Kale, then with Asparagus
and Mushrooms and Dwarf French Beans, and so on to 'higher heights' of this branch of
practical gardening.
Source: The Culture of Vegetables and Flowers From Seeds and Roots, 16th Edition
1921, Sutton and Sons