
Taking On Our First Plot
11 min read - Too Long?
So if you’ve read the about page you’ll have a rough idea of why I decided to put my name down for an allotment and why I decided to share some kind of online Journal.
Many of us felt the need to start meeting up during the 2020 psy-op but it wasn’t something that I ever wanted to do for various reasons – I’m not enough of a people person but at the time needs musted.
I don’t have the same view of the “Truth Movement” or “Great Awakening” as many people and I feel that for the most part it’s completely controlled, as are most (if not all) of the things we’ve been part of over the years.
Basically I believe the information is being put out there for us on purpose, and has been for a long time but if I’m wrong and this just is what it is then I know were I stand, which is why I started trying to grow my own food!
Anyway…
A Bit of Trepidation
The main thing that bothered me about getting an allotment was how hard it was for me speak to people that had fallen for the psy-op on such a level that they risked their own health and everyone’s “liberty” for “a cold”.
I know I speak for many of us when I say it was hard not to be disappointed in people during 2020 and beyond. The idea of having to be social with people that had gone along with everything wasn’t something I looked forward to.
Working around people motivated enough to grow their own food is obviously going to be quite a social thing but I didn’t want to be arguing with them if I might have to spend years as plot neighbours with them.
In truth, by the time we got on our first plot I had the sense that people were fed up with it all, or had maybe had their issues during the psy-op. I can honestly say it wasn’t until a few years later that it even came up.
I’ll get into more of certain conversations, the kind of people on the plot, where they’re from and what they’re like later on. Generally though, people are generous, helpful and overall very nice.
Getting & Clearing the Plot
It was June 2022 when we finally got our first plot. We had a choice of three at the time and picked one with a shed, four fruit trees and various fruit bushes. By the way, a full plot is now an old half plot or 2.5 “poles”.
We could have chosen a larger plot but at the time they were more of a mess - the shed and trees swung it for us. When you haven’t grown before it’s hard to think you might ever get on top of it all, let alone start growing.
It was 40 degrees in June that year and I hadn’t done any “proper” digging prior to this. I was also still overweight from letting myself go during six years in an office job and two very close family deaths in quick succession.


I began losing weight prior to clearing the plot after reading What Really Makes You Ill and attending a couple of the authors book talks. I don’t think I’d have had the required energy if I’d stayed in the shape as I was.
I still recommend the book to as many people as I can. Understanding what illness is is the key to eating properly and staying healthy. Losing weight just follows and I haven’t looked back.
The plot was the usual mess of weeds and God knows what else but we cleared it in just under a week, it was hard work and HOT! The soil wasn’t great as the previous owner had used it more for fruit and flowers.
"Understanding what illness is is the key to eating properly and staying healthy. Losing weight just follows."
First Sowing & Harvest
It was July by the time we’d cleared the plot and most of the advice from other plot owners was to cover the soil and wait until next year. One of the old boys told us to just throw some seeds in and see what happens.
We’re glad we listened and threw in a bit of everything. Beetroots, carrots, lettuce, chard etc even some spuds. It’s hard to imagine now not even knowing how to mark out a straight line and sprinkle some seeds in.
It was so hot that year that after a week we had seeds germinating left right and center. The potatoes went crazy even surprising some of the older heads on the plot. It was good – everything was new to us.


The rest of the year was just a case of staying on top of watering, weeding, and just keeping an eye on things. It’s easy really, you plant the seeds, hope they get a bit of sun, water them and just let them do their thing.
I didn’t want to get too “booky” growing. Gardening has long been taken over by the climate change cult and it’s hard to find any new books not pushing “human caused climate change” down your throat in the foreword.

I want to find lots of things out for myself as I’m growing but you also don’t want to “throw the baby out with the bathwater” as some vegetables do like certain things - there’s centuries of good information out there.
We did really well in the end. Most of our harvesting happened a bit later than everyone else and we were pulling up beetroots, carrots and potatoes amongst other things in late October.



Bad Year For Chemtrails
I have weird view of these. The only thing I know for sure is that they block out the sun. I look up, the sun has gone. As for the all the other stuff, the Barium, Strontium the Aluminum etc, I just don’t know.
As far as I know they might only go up, and could be harmless. The rest is another psy-op to piss people off to rally against Government and ask for change, change they’ll be in control of as usual.
Regardless, they’re still disgusting. It’s clear to see that they change the weather, and they definitely affect growing. If a plant doesn’t get light until late afternoon for weeks on end, it’s going to affect how they grow.


These pictures were above us in 2022 and were that bad I sent them to the local MP just for the sake of it. I got a reply that just said “duly noted”. It made me chuckle and was obviously completely pointless.
People On The Plot
As I said at the start, this was one of my worries before getting a plot but it’s hard to keep yourself to yourself without coming across as rude, especially when you’re there at the same time and in close proximity.
Let’s get it out of the way. At least half the people on the plot are foreign. Lithuanian, Turkish, Polish, Iranian, Jamaican, Nigerian, Vietnamese and other Eastern Europeans that I can’t confirm. There are also Irish & Welsh.
The English people are generally among the older people on the plot, and the younger English that have had a plots tend to put kids slides on them, let them run around all over the place before they get bored and give up.
"Your enemies are much closer to home I'm afraid."
I’d be lying if I didn’t say it was annoying often times to not hear a word of English spoken down there at all. It’s impossible to be social when you can’t even speak the language with people – it’s not my place to learn Turkish.
I know it’s Kalergi plan, replacement migration, whatever you want to call it but don’t expect me to fall for the Tommy Robinson psy-op. The people that have enabled this live far closer to home I’m afraid.
The truth is it takes a certain kind of mindset to want to grow your own food so you have that in common regardless but I don’t like what I see. It feels wrong, it is wrong but I could never fight a stranger over it.
Another truth is that people from other countries are much more into growing their own food than English people fed a lifetime of McDonalds and playing Xbox for the last twenty years. It’s how it is. Change it.
Naturally I’ve gravitated to (but not solely to) the English people on the allotment – they’re a decent bunch, will lend anything you might need and are overly generous with food they really should be keeping for themselves.
Was It All Worth It?
If you’re looking just at what it costs, the answer is probably no. When first starting you feel the need to buy tools and other bits and pieces like hoops, canes and netting. Seed prices are a joke too. It quickly mounts up…
It’s also A LOT of work and I’ve found I never go down to potter about and take it easy. I’ll always end up finding things to do, and before I know I’ve spent another 6-7 hours down there. An allotment takes commitment.
"I've found I never go down to potter about and take it easy. I'll always end up finding things to do..."
I wanted to get more into this in later posts but the point isn’t money, it’s about keeping an eye on the food, knowing it’s in soil, plus the benefit of being outside and getting stuck into something quite physical.
This recent article Rayner Declares War On Allotments as well as the paper in Nature about urban agriculture causing six times the carbon emissions as traditional agricultural farming methods tells us where we’re going.
They won’t take them all away but they’ll let some allotments go to rat shit, then they’ll say no one wanted them and start building flats on them in line with Agenda 21/2030.
It would be nice if more “awake” people had their names down for plots. I sort of hope that maybe if people read this site that it might make a few put their names down.
Lessons Learned
- It’s easy to grow - just plant something and add sun and water.
- It’s never too late to change the direction your health might be heading.
- I learned that we don’t “catch” anything…
- And that “we were all ill at the same time once” is no longer a valid argument that we do.
- It’s never too late in the year to plant something.
- No one is going to laugh at you if something doesn’t grow.
- Things aren’t going to get any easier but we’ve got to try.
- Some allotments are slowly being let to go to ruin whilst some are being filled up with people - like ours.
2020 signalled to me I needed to grow my own food the best way I could. Unfortunately it meant an allotment via the council.
My apprehension of being around people after the psy-op was unfounded. They seemed bored of it all and glad to be back on their plots properly. Nothing regarding what went on was even mentioned.
Growing was quite easy once clearing the plot was done and the hot weather helped get the seeds going really quickly.
We eventually had a good harvest in our first year even though it was a bit later than everyone else but it was a bit pricey buying tools and things.
People were very helpful and friendly and unsurprisingly English people on the plots seem to be fading out slowly…
Suggested Reading
agenda 2030chemtrailsclearing allotmentkalergi plan