Does Heligan do double digging everywhere in the gardens?
Heligan uses the double digging method in the kitchen garden within the productive gardens. Of the 200+ acre estate, only one and a half acres use this method. This approach was born out of representation of a working country house from late 1900 productive garden and its rotations. The method creates a friable soil that’s easy to work with and sow into and it also replicates how these parts of the garden would have been worked in the Victorian times.
However, more recently the reason that we have continued to use this method in this area of the gardens is less about preserving a heritage horticultural practice, and more about creating a ‘control’ as part of a wider research study.
The University of Plymouth is conducting a research project into carbon sequestration, and also how different soil treatments can affect the nutritional quality of the vegetables grown in different kinds of soil – in our case, rainbow chard grown in soil which is uses double digging.
Because this particular part of the Kitchen Garden has been managed in a specific way for the last 30 years we are able to provide a ‘control’ set for data on key metrics of soil health, such as carbon sequestration and nutritional performance to our research partners, and therefore they (and we) keen not to change what we do, so we can continue to provide consistent data.