Primrose - you've hit the nail on the head! Yes it will take chainsaws and long ladders to tackle it now...and then it's having to get rid of all those prunings! Which is the main reason I'll be getting someone in...they have a big chipper that can 'disappear' the mountain of waste! I don't have room to burn it even if I wanted to.
Yes a feature on adapting your garden to make it low maintenance sounds like a good one. I'll have a think.
Early Summer bits and bobs - 2017
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- Primrose
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One of these days I must get round to painting all the handles of my hand trowels and forks bright red or fluorescent orange! I!m always putting them down somewhere and losing them amongst the last bit of greenery I was working on. I've currently mislaid my favourite pointed hand trowel for weeding and it,s disconcerting how frustrating it is having to work with a substitute tool which is nowhere so effective in this dry ground.
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Primrose you think you have problems misplacing trowels ,my wife has no short term memory due to a stroke, we have four different trowels down the plot and I can never find one ,luckily we have decent people near us so they never go walkies only mislaid , don't mention combs
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Robo, that must be difficult.
Are there any techniques which help?
My dad suffered from dementia and I created a memory exercise book for him to write down the things he was worrying about so I could sort them out when aI visited. It worked well for a while but then he started tearing out the pages on which he!d written things and putting them "in a safe place" so he wouldn't t lose them but then he forgot where his safe place was so it sadly became an imlracticql way of theying to remember things.
Are there any techniques which help?
My dad suffered from dementia and I created a memory exercise book for him to write down the things he was worrying about so I could sort them out when aI visited. It worked well for a while but then he started tearing out the pages on which he!d written things and putting them "in a safe place" so he wouldn't t lose them but then he forgot where his safe place was so it sadly became an imlracticql way of theying to remember things.
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I don't think there is anything that can help , she enjoys her gardening but at present she is not in good enough health to do much ,she had three days last week when we thought her problems where near to an end but Sunday afternoon the pain returned and she has been in agony since ,we see the cancer specialist on the seventh of next month then Waite for her decision
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Steve, save the shreddings for veg plot mulching.
Hedges, the worst is leylandii, if you cut back to brown thats it, game over, as it will not regrow ever from brown wood.
Hazel and hawthorn are best for informal hedges and hornbeam for formal, beach is reluctant to grow from old wood. The first two are coppice compatible, so can be cut to stumps and still regrow with vigour.
Hedges, the worst is leylandii, if you cut back to brown thats it, game over, as it will not regrow ever from brown wood.
Hazel and hawthorn are best for informal hedges and hornbeam for formal, beach is reluctant to grow from old wood. The first two are coppice compatible, so can be cut to stumps and still regrow with vigour.
Do not put off thanking people when they have helped you, as they may not be there to thank later.
I support http://www.hearingdogs.org.uk/
I support http://www.hearingdogs.org.uk/
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I could do with one of those, the shredder and stump thing would be useful too.
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For a while it had me stumped but then I realised. First time I have ever seen a picture of 'Arborculturalist Stig'
The danger when people start to believe their own publicity is that they often fall off their own ego.
At least travelling under the guise of the Pa Snip Enterprise gives me an excuse for appearing to be on another planet
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Some very welcome rain yesterday evening and overnight. Waterbutts full again. Must have been especially welcome to those with allotments for whom watering is more difficult. Just hope that the mild damp atmosphere doesn't trigger another blight warning now my outdoor tomatoes are starting to develop fruit.
Just had a blight warning for tomorrow in my area! Will be moving the few tomato plants I can move that are outside in pots, inside soonest!
Wow, some serious kit there Geoff - but what a super garden you have! Very jealous!
Wow, some serious kit there Geoff - but what a super garden you have! Very jealous!
Steve Ott
Kitchen Garden Editor
Kitchen Garden Editor
- Pa Snip
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Primrose wrote:Some very welcome rain yesterday evening and overnight. Waterbutts full again. Must have been especially welcome to those with allotments for whom watering is more difficult. Just hope that the mild damp atmosphere doesn't trigger another blight warning now my outdoor tomatoes are starting to develop fruit.
GRRRRR OH YE TEMPTRESS OF FATE
2 hours after you posted the above a full Hutton blight warning arrived for today. GRRRRRRRRRRRR Fingers crossed it gives me a miss
The danger when people start to believe their own publicity is that they often fall off their own ego.
At least travelling under the guise of the Pa Snip Enterprise gives me an excuse for appearing to be on another planet
- Pa Snip
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KG Steve wrote:Just had a blight warning for tomorrow in my area! Will be moving the few tomato plants I can move that are outside in pots, inside soonest!
Wow, some serious kit there Geoff - but what a super garden you have! Very jealous!
At least you got a days notice, the warning I've just received is for today
The danger when people start to believe their own publicity is that they often fall off their own ego.
At least travelling under the guise of the Pa Snip Enterprise gives me an excuse for appearing to be on another planet