It's good to be back.
Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2017 2:34 pm
I don't have much to offer other than do some reading, and catch-up.
So I opened a beer and started catching up, bought a smile to my face, a warm-glow feeling and got started trying to figure what I could do to contribute at a time not much gardening is going on.
Next season I have to use most of my raised beds for perennial wildflower nurseries, annuals don't do well because of the seed-bank and I had proved to myself ten years ago that well-chosen perennials will do well amongst seed bank annuals.
It took ten years to get the wildflower I nurtured from seed to get established, who was it who recently recommended a good way to grow cowslip from seed ? Too much love has led to many failures, successes during recent years have been where I threw seed into our gravel drive then kicked it around. Our gravel drive and parking are made up from what is locally called "Scalpings". Scalping are local stone ground into pieces of from 15mm to huge chunks. Scalping are usually spread over a bed of cheaper hardcore based on all sorts of non descript stone mixed with sand and gravel that forms an easy to consolidate layer. A lot of perennials love it but you have to get the roots going in the layer under the scalping.
Just thought you would love to know, as part of your ongoing education.
(Smile)
So I opened a beer and started catching up, bought a smile to my face, a warm-glow feeling and got started trying to figure what I could do to contribute at a time not much gardening is going on.
Next season I have to use most of my raised beds for perennial wildflower nurseries, annuals don't do well because of the seed-bank and I had proved to myself ten years ago that well-chosen perennials will do well amongst seed bank annuals.
It took ten years to get the wildflower I nurtured from seed to get established, who was it who recently recommended a good way to grow cowslip from seed ? Too much love has led to many failures, successes during recent years have been where I threw seed into our gravel drive then kicked it around. Our gravel drive and parking are made up from what is locally called "Scalpings". Scalping are local stone ground into pieces of from 15mm to huge chunks. Scalping are usually spread over a bed of cheaper hardcore based on all sorts of non descript stone mixed with sand and gravel that forms an easy to consolidate layer. A lot of perennials love it but you have to get the roots going in the layer under the scalping.
Just thought you would love to know, as part of your ongoing education.
(Smile)