All This Talk About Leek Clubs...
#1
Posted 09 January 2012 - 02:15 PM
#2
Posted 09 January 2012 - 03:23 PM
It was their growing methods that I found interesting at the time:
Homemade fertilizer - the contents of their potties* tipped into a 45 gallon ex-oil drum which had probably been nicked from the pit, assorted slops added, and left to 'stew'. This brew was then tipped into jam jars set at the base of each plant ... these jars had the bottoms removed to form 'open-ended' tubes but where clearly used as measuring devices. They removed the jam jam bottoms by putting an inch of old engine oil in the jar, plunging a red hot poker into the oil to heat it up, then lowering the jar into cold water; the glass base dropped off due to the 'shock' ... clever boys those old pitmen.
They also tied a roll of newspaper around the base a the leek to keep/extend the white bit - kept the sun off.
Leek seed was guarded with military methods to stop it being nicked by rivals ... they used to camp-out in the garden for weeks while the seed heads ripened on the plants. They also kept guard just prior to the showing season so that rivals couldn't attack the plants.
*their pit row houses had outside netties (for our younger viewers - WCs) so if caught short during the night after a heavy drinking session at the club they just sat on the edge of the bed and did the business on the potty ... yuk!
#3
Posted 09 January 2012 - 04:51 PM
#4
Posted 09 January 2012 - 04:58 PM
No points for guessing what he was eating.
#5
Posted 09 January 2012 - 05:47 PM
As for eating the leeks they were great and a potatoe and Leek pie was a favorite.
#6
Posted 09 January 2012 - 10:57 PM
Brettly, on 09 January 2012 - 04:58 PM, said:
No points for guessing what he was eating.
Also on top of this The Leek Show can also be a pseudonym for strippers at certain clubs in the area.
#7
Posted 09 January 2012 - 11:21 PM
#8
Posted 09 January 2012 - 11:50 PM
#9
Posted 10 January 2012 - 11:17 PM
Symptoms, If I'd known that as a child I don't think I'd have eaten broth after the leek show. That fertiliser must have been a well kept secret. I had no idea!!
Brian, Which kind of leek show was it that you just missed? According to Brettly there are two.
Keith, that's not a bad idea! I'll see what i can do but I'll contact you nearer the time for details so that I don't take him to the wrong type of leek show!
However, he's still driving me nuts with questions about the competitive side of the thing. How do they judge leeks? What qualities and characteristics are they comparing?
I can remember the leek show at the 'tute' in Netherton. I recall that leeks were always displayed in sets of 3, propped up against the backs of the chairs. As far as I remember the size of the leeks in each set was pretty much the same but in some sets the leeks were enormous and in others quite small. However, it wasn't always the biggest that won if my memory serves me right. Could it be that size, in this instance at least, doesn't matter?
#10
Posted 10 January 2012 - 11:43 PM
Quote
After a hard day underground, the garden or allotment offered pitmen fresh air, contact with the natural world and produce.
The aim of show growers is to produce a stand of two or three leeks combining size, uniformity and quality.
According to leek historian and grower Bill Rutherford, the first recorded show in the region was in Swarland in Northumberland in 1846, while in Ashington in the 1930s there were around 35 shows.
The science of leek growing has its own body, the National Pot Leek Society, which holds its annual show in the North East.
But many shows have closed, including the big joint Northumberland and County Durham Club and Institute event.
Source - Journal Live
#11
Posted 11 January 2012 - 12:11 AM
#12
Posted 11 January 2012 - 01:23 AM
Canny lass, on 10 January 2012 - 11:17 PM, said:
Symptoms, If I'd known that as a child I don't think I'd have eaten broth after the leek show. That fertiliser must have been a well kept secret. I had no idea!!
Brian, Which kind of leek show was it that you just missed? According to Brettly there are two.
Keith, that's not a bad idea! I'll see what i can do but I'll contact you nearer the time for details so that I don't take him to the wrong type of leek show!
However, he's still driving me nuts with questions about the competitive side of the thing. How do they judge leeks? What qualities and characteristics are they comparing?
I can remember the leek show at the 'tute' in Netherton. I recall that leeks were always displayed in sets of 3, propped up against the backs of the chairs. As far as I remember the size of the leeks in each set was pretty much the same but in some sets the leeks were enormous and in others quite small. However, it wasn't always the biggest that won if my memory serves me right. Could it be that size, in this instance at least, doesn't matter?
#13
Posted 11 January 2012 - 02:04 AM
- Pot Leeks: Must have a blanched (white) area no longer than 150mm (6 inches) with no limit on the circumference.
- Intermediate Leeks: Must have a blanched area of 150-350-mm (6-14 inches), with no limit to their circumference.
- Blanch leeks or Trench Leeks: Must have a minimal blanched length of 230mm (9 inches) and can go up to 600mm (24 inches). The minimum length for blanch leeks is 350mm (14 inches
http://www.nvsuk.org...ow-show-25.html
http://www.chronicle...72703-29365713/
#14
Posted 11 January 2012 - 08:23 AM
Apparently there are two different sets of rules, the NVS (National Vegetable Society) & RHS (Royal Horticultural Society)
#15
Posted 11 January 2012 - 11:49 PM
The pictures are now winging their way to various parts of Sweden to friends who haven't believed me either. You never know but this just might catch on with the Swedes? The'yre already experts at the other kind of leek show. Thanks again. You've made my day.
#16
Posted 12 January 2012 - 02:11 AM
I remember that there were different judging standards around the area, if your leeks were too large or too small for your local club they would ask their Marra to put them in their club! I think you had to register early to try and stop this, the prizes were pretty good for the 50’s and 60’s TV,s etc one of the sneaky ploys was to “try” and sneak into a rivals garden and water or feed their leeks to make them split!
#17
Posted 12 January 2012 - 08:41 AM
Canny lass, on 11 January 2012 - 11:49 PM, said:
I don't think you could get a swede anywhere as big as the leeks in the picture
#19
Posted 12 January 2012 - 04:40 PM
Paul M.
#20
Posted 15 January 2012 - 10:03 PM
At Widdrington Club i came 9th out of 38 and was really chuffed. That was in 1982 and i retired from leeg growing
I decided to come out of retirement in 2008 and entered at Guide Post Club. I was hoping to do really well and it never happened for me i was second last
Never mind tho on a happier note i win the biggest and best two onions. Everyone was asking for onions off me with that result.
Never mind i will never enter another it took a lot of time up, but good luck to those who still do it, they keep our tradition alive.
Edited by johndawsonjune1955, 15 January 2012 - 10:03 PM.
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