If you’ve had chance to read the first chapter of Carrots at
Dawn below I hope it's whetted your 'happy tit' enough to buy it and read the
rest of it. There are a few bad reviews left on Amazon by people who objected
to Craven Morehead (bloody nice bloke, very handsome too) contacting them direct via their presences on various
gardening websites that are all in the PUBLIC FUCKING DOMAIN. Anyone blessed
with the gift of laissez faire would merely have deleted those contacts
(emails/FB messages/Forum posts etc) if they objected so strongly, but surely
there are many more important things in life these days that should get our
ganders up. One particularly nasty response came from a Mr. D. Brooks whoever
the hell he is, who wrote;
'More than one gardening forum has been spammed by this person desperate to make an odd sale or two. For this reason - the same reason as one of the other reviewers - I would not now go anywhere near it.'
Now, I don’t know who this twat is but he sounds like a very
old and miserable wanker with an allergy to smiling and if he ever attempted to write anything
gardening/showing/allotment related or otherwise I have absolutely no doubt it
would be the most boring and droning document ever written since the Hong Kong
phone book, but no doubt he’d get an award for it. A much nicer review (and
there are many) came from a Karen Coleman;
'Absolutely hilarious. Couldn't put this book down. Had me chuckling out loud from start to finish. If you've a sense of humour and like gardening/growing vegetables then you'll love it. But if you're easily offended by swear words then maybe not. I thought it was bloody brilliant.
Highly recommended! '
Highly recommended! '
Moving on, I’m a great fan of the small collections at many
of the bigger shows such as the 3x2 class which calls for 3 exhibits of two 20
point vegetables. This can often be useful as you usually need to pull many
more long carrots of parsnips than you might need for a class, and can often
find a good matching pair that would otherwise be left behind. Similarly you
may harvest a glut of cauliflowers, or have more celery ready than you need for
the regular classes. When the National was last held at Malvern in 2012 I
entered this class with a pair each of long carrots, parsnips and celery and
was very happy with my entry albeit I was nowhere near the tickets as there was
a really heavy entry that year.
At Dundee in 2015 I went for long carrots, parsnips and
caulis and was a mere point outside the tickets, so whilst making progress it
really goes to show that all 3 dishes have to be top notch.
The winning entry from the great Scot Alistair Gray gives
you some idea of the mountain mere mortals like me have to climb.
At Malvern last year for the Midlands Branch Championships I
came 4th although quite how the judge awarded me a ticket beggars
belief as one of my long carrots had quite a large split near the shoulder
where it had got compressed by some boxes during the car journey. I really do
wonder sometimes if the judges handle every single specimen, whilst having some
sympathy with them as they are under pressure to get the task done in order for
the show to open.
The ‘Millennium Class’ was introduced at the National a
dozen or so years ago. You need 4 each of stump carrots, potatoes, 250g onions,
globe beetroot and tomatoes, the idea being that you don’t need fancy growing
facilities to be able to grow any of the crops required. 250g onions can be grown from sowing in
February, tomatoes in March, spuds and stumps in April, and globe beet from
May, so it really should be open to anyone. In reality it aint that easy and
the top growers are usually to the fore, Peter Clark winning for the 3rd
time in total at Dundee with this exhibit.
I was an excruciating half point outside the tickets, my
tomatoes letting me down for once, the yellow calyces getting me down marked I
feel sure, although they somehow scored 15 out of 18, and my spuds only
receiving 13 out of 20, but at least I had improved on my 2012 showing when I
was actually last out of 20 or so entries!
Note the maximum points available for each crop;
Spuds 20
Tomatoes 18
Stump carrots 18
250g onions 15
Globe beet 15
These are due to the degree of difficulty determined to grow
each crop, spuds being the highest, 250g onions and globe beet being deemed the
easiest. At the Midlands Branch the rules are slightly different, as you can
choose any 4 from 5 of the vegetables, but here you want to be careful that you
don’t choose both 15 pointer crops at the expense of one of the 18 or 20
pointers, as you’ll be 3 or 5 points behind before you’ve even started, so you
only want to go for one or the other if possible. At Malvern last year I came a
very pleasing 2nd, only one point off the red card, pleasing until I
realised it was Dave Thornton what had won it. Bollocks!
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