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How much does your plot cost?
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Should have been �56 however the site was re-designated from an allotment to a comunal growing area whatever that means? Anyway it costs me �10 per year that covers society membership and insurance. I've not had a contract yet though???
We have water not on at the moment though.
But no way of getting compost to site as it's behind houses with access that is wide enough to drive a car down then a sharp turn which means you can't get a trailer etc round.
MGLast edited by mrgrower; 24-02-2013, 05:55 PM.Today I will be mainly growing Vegetables.
Tonight The bloody slugs & snails will eat them!
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I paid �58 last year - it will certainly be more than that this time! Also have to pay �10 deposit for a key because the site is fenced - reasonably securely. There is water that you can use to fill butts - only a couple of taps for the whole site (70+ plots). No other facilities. The site secretary is very good and can organise compost, manure, chippings etc but we have to pay.
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Ours is charged per square yd - something like 14p per square yd. Mine is 180 sq yds so works out at about �22 for the year plus �3 membership and �20 key deposit.
There is a discount for pensioners and unemployed - I think half price.
We have water and a toilet, a shop on Sunday mornings and some community areas, including a pond and picnic tables. Full security fencing and you can order seed potatoes, manure and other things through the shop.Likac66
Living in her own purple world
Loving gardening, reading, knitting and crochet.
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Try not to laugh...I pay �400 pa for a 200 square metre plot. It's on a private site- good security, own tap, free manure, facilities on site, social events etc, so to me it's money well spent. I waited on the council list for over five years before 'going private' and I'm still nowhere near the top of the council list.
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Sorry Wendy, you can't compare a bar of chocolate with ground for growing vegetables. You can enjoy your bar of chocolate without doing anything else. To get a return from an allotment you have to work damned hard and you also have to spend more.Originally posted by WendyC View PostThat's expensive compared to some but it's a little over a pound a day. Not much you can do with a pound, even a chocolate bar is about that these days.
The Sheriff Principal in my court case(sorry if I'm getting boring with the references to this)when bawling out the Solicitor for the local Council said you can't seriously be saying you can compare growing potatoes with going for a swim.
A bit of a reality check needed.
Also, you mention just over a pound a day. We don't use our allotments 24/7/365. Can't even get on to them in the winter weather.
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okies.Originally posted by WendyC View PostWhat I was trying to say was that you could spend a pound a day and have nothing to show for it, whereas with an allotment you do. Yes I know you have to spend more on it than the rent.
My main point is that the benefits from an allotment come from the graft the allotment holder puts in. Without the graft, there is no prospect at all of a return.
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Hi Wendy - yes, I too tend to think in the 'what else could I get for my money' sort of way. I gave up my �400 gym membership to pay for the allotment, and tbh I think all the digging and lugging wheelbarrows around has got me fitter than the gym ever did.
Mind you.....400 bars of chocolate......sounds tempting!!
Reading through these posts though does make me somewhat jealous, it sounds like allotments are much more available than in N Ireland. I'm not sure why that is - maybe because our councils have very limited responsibilities for leisure over here. Do councils on the mainland have a statutory duty to provide allotments? It doesn't sound like they're running them for profit.
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Definite absolute obligation to provide allotments in Scotland. The rent has to be the fair rent. They can't just pluck a rent outofthe air.Originally posted by WPG View PostDo councils on the mainland have a statutory duty to provide allotments? It doesn't sound like they're running them for profit.
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I always think of mine in comparison to gym membership. Have spent a fortune on them in the past (both council and privately run) with no return as I just didn't go. I now pay a small percentage of that price and get massively more benefit to my physical and mental health before I harvest anything to eat.Originally posted by Aberdeenplotter View Postokies.
My main point is that the benefits from an allotment come from the graft the allotment holder puts in. Without the graft, there is no prospect at all of a return.
Some of us live in the past, always talking about back then. Some of us live in the future, always planning what we are going to do. And, then there are those, who neither look behind or ahead, but just enjoy the moment of right now.
Which one are you and is it how you want to be?
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I understand where you are coming from Alison but it is still not a valid comparison. you walk out of the gym with its lovely facilities and you leave your responsibility behind. When taking on an allotments,you take on an ongoing obligation with no similarity at all in the facilities provided.
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No the comparison is totally valid for me, I don't have any ongoing responsibilities to my plot, could easily walk away when I no longer need it, its not like a bank loan or even pet ownership. Maybe things are different in your lottie contract or personal circumstances but things are not the same for everybody. Whilst I certainly don't want to pay hundreds of pounds for my plot it is certainly extreme good value at the less than �30 I paid last year.Originally posted by Aberdeenplotter View PostI understand where you are coming from Alison but it is still not a valid comparison. you walk out of the gym with its lovely facilities and you leave your responsibility behind. When taking on an allotments,you take on an ongoing obligation with no similarity at all in the facilities provided.
Some of us live in the past, always talking about back then. Some of us live in the future, always planning what we are going to do. And, then there are those, who neither look behind or ahead, but just enjoy the moment of right now.
Which one are you and is it how you want to be?
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Oh and give me the facilities of my lottie (ie land and fresh air) over a noisy and sweaty gym every day. Far more valuable.
Some of us live in the past, always talking about back then. Some of us live in the future, always planning what we are going to do. And, then there are those, who neither look behind or ahead, but just enjoy the moment of right now.
Which one are you and is it how you want to be?
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