How Times Have Changed
Posted: Sat Jul 18, 2015 3:33 pm
I am at present completing my annual dog sitting responsibilities having just recovered from dog sitting for 3 Dalmatians at home for my youngest son's girlfriend I now am at Husbands Bosworth looking after daughter's Greyhound. My legs are aching and I feel quite shattered. I usually have a nose at any allotments when I visit a place and came across this snippet from their gardening news leaflet:
http://www.husbandsbosworth.info
GARDENING NEWS
Whilst throwing out some old copies of the Sunday Times, villager Patricia Hobson spotted a snippet of information relating to Husbands Bosworth allotments. In 1846, plot-holders were warned:
“Every occupier is expected to attend divine service on Sundays; and every occupier who digs potatoes or otherwise works his land on Sunday shall immediately forfeit the same”.
A copy of the Rules of the Allotments held in the Historical Society’s Archive collection also adds: “The land shall only be worked by spade husbandry. Two ordinary loads of manure shall be laid every year upon each rood. Not more than half of any allotment in any one year shall be cropped with white grain; the other half to be cropped with pulse, potatoes or green crops, but no turnips or other crop of that kind to be grown for seed. The corn stubbles shall be dug up every year before Christmas”.
I for one completely agree with all the sensible rules above and I don't supposed that they would have put up with any vandalism either in those days, how times have changed (alas not always for the best).
Barney
http://www.husbandsbosworth.info
GARDENING NEWS
Whilst throwing out some old copies of the Sunday Times, villager Patricia Hobson spotted a snippet of information relating to Husbands Bosworth allotments. In 1846, plot-holders were warned:
“Every occupier is expected to attend divine service on Sundays; and every occupier who digs potatoes or otherwise works his land on Sunday shall immediately forfeit the same”.
A copy of the Rules of the Allotments held in the Historical Society’s Archive collection also adds: “The land shall only be worked by spade husbandry. Two ordinary loads of manure shall be laid every year upon each rood. Not more than half of any allotment in any one year shall be cropped with white grain; the other half to be cropped with pulse, potatoes or green crops, but no turnips or other crop of that kind to be grown for seed. The corn stubbles shall be dug up every year before Christmas”.
I for one completely agree with all the sensible rules above and I don't supposed that they would have put up with any vandalism either in those days, how times have changed (alas not always for the best).
Barney