I sorted out the leek plants on Saturday afternoon ,, used an end tapered stick to make 8 inch deep holes and gently swirled a 10 inch long leek including roots down the holes and left them for nature to carry on with things. don't bqack fill the hole nature will do it for you
There was barely an inch of greeenery showing , today there is almost two inches showing .
One of the old Italian ( EX UK POW's ) boys on the allotments used to use an old square tined standard adult garden fork that had only three tines on it , having had the middle two cut off and replaced by one of them in the center of the other two to make a trident of sorts
He used to dig his spade width trenches about 2 feet deep in winter , put a foot of well rotted cow muck & straw in it and back fill level to the top .
By spring it had sunk down some six inches and it was here that he used his trident to make the leek planting holes then planted the " leeklings " when they were seven inches tall .
He grew the bigggest and best leeks on the whole 120 allotment pitches .