Cultivators and deturfing machines

Cleaning, fixing, using, repairing, best and worst of your mechanical aids in the garden...

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oldherbaceous
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Location: Beautiful Bedfordshire
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Dear Plummpudding, you might have come up with a new business venture, Pig hire. :)
Kind Regards, Old Herbaceous.

There's no fool like an old fool.
haggis
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Posts: 125
Joined: Sat Jan 07, 2006 9:35 pm

Thanks all, lots of great replies. Whatever route I take I can see that realistically I will only manage to open up a small patch for next season. All a bit academic now anyway as it has poured with rain for days and everything is soaked. I think that's the end of the allotment until next year now unless we get a dry spell and we don't get many of them in Aberdeen over the winter! :D
Nature's Babe
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Joined: Tue Nov 03, 2009 6:02 pm
Location: East Sussex

Dear Haggis, if your ground is waterlogged in winter raising the beds will help , and water will gravitate down to the paths, it can be done simply without extra expense, as in this link.http://www.charlesdowding.co.uk/node/73
Sit down before a fact as a little child, be prepared to give up every preconcieved notion, follow humbly wherever and to whatever abyss nature leads, or you shall learn nothing.
By Thomas Huxley
http://www.wildrye.info/reserve/
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