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What Jobs Are We Doing In The Garden Today 2019

Discussion in 'General Gardening Discussion' started by Fat Controller, Feb 16, 2019.

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  1. Upsydaisy

    Upsydaisy Total Gardener

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    Busy day at my Dad's today, laundry and housework am and gardening all afternoon. Just having a coffee break before finishing off before the daylight fades.:)
     
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    • shiney

      shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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      As it was sunny I continued tidying pots and moving them to an area where most of the leaves don't fall.

      Helped Mrs Shiney with potting up a couple of hundred tulips - some of the pots are for other people.

      Potted up a couple of dozen tete-a-tete small daff bulbs that I found scattered about when tidying the pots in the nursery area. There are no tete-a-tete in that area! :scratch:

      Fed the birds.

      Moved a quarter of a ton of bagged horse poo from the front, where a friend unloaded it, to the compost heaps at the far end of the garden. I reckon I walked about half a mile doing that :phew:. I'll get Lewis to empty the bags and dig them into the compost heaps ready for next Autumn.

      Picked another bucket of apples.

      Frost starting to form on the car :hate-shocked:
       
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      • ARMANDII

        ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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        Well, I like wooden Green Houses and was going to buy one originally but after some consideration decided to go for an Aliuminium one. It wasn't the price that mattered but I wanted something that would be maintainance free as much as possible. Looking at the market now, you can get a Belmont 8' x 18' Green House with 5 roof vents for as little as £1400:dunno: Thats the single door version but adding a two door version isn't much more expensive. and you could add extras such as louvres.:cat-kittyandsmiley::coffee:
         
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        • ARMANDII

          ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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          I waited until it got warmer at around 1pm when the temperature rose to 40f, after a 27f start to the morning. I've been waiting. due to rain, for days to plant 225 Crocus bulbs but managed to find some space in the borders for them, so that is all my bulbs that needed planting done:hapydancsmil: Now all that needs doing is to place the 50 or so Hardy Perennials in pots on the borders trying to plan what will best go where.
          After the Crocus were planted, I mixed two buckets of compost, sand and grit and took them into the Green House to finish off planting a large pot with Tulips and Daffs and then two long plastic troughs with the same. I've still got two half buckets of last years Tulip and Daff bulbs left after planting the Troughs and large pot up, so I've have to find somewhere to plant them.........and then wait, impatiently, for Spring!!:cat-kittyandsmiley::coffee: Oh, and I nearly forgot to say that I've placed the two big Fleece over the Hardy Perennials in pots on the Patio ready for the frosty night tonight.
           
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          • redstar

            redstar Total Gardener

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            Oh, darn it, its raining outside, can't rake leaves all day.
             
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            • Perki

              Perki Total Gardener

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              Potted on some verbascums yesterday, and put the dahlias to bed I bury them in the GH veg border. Had a bit of a tidy up in the GH put all the trays back together they just get chucked in no wonder it looks like a tip in their half the time. I am going to replace the grapevine in the GH with a seedless variety with Lakemont, can't bring myself round to cutting my old vine down though :sad:

              Still haven't planted out all my bulbs yet still got the box of alliums hopefully tomorrow I'll get it done.
               
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              • ARMANDII

                ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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                [​IMG]
                 
              • ARMANDII

                ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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                I took advantage of the quiet, mild, weather to don my mucky clothes, old fishing boots, Secateurs, Scissors, string, and leather gloves to finish off pruning the Jasmine/Clematis Hedge along the Wildlife pond and some of the 10 or more climbing roses lining the West bank.
                I'd also discovered two large pots that had some plants which, shamefully, had been left unattended for decades and so I'd forgotten what was in them. So, I've cut out some of the dense growth with roots, potted them up, and then used the Porters Trolley to move the large pots to the Green Waste bin on the driveway to empty them. The compost and plants actually slid out of the pots, when turned upside down, into the bin without much encouragement, presumably due to it being wet and heavy, either way it made the job much easier. A large sack of hedge and climbing rose prunings followed the pot contents into the bin leaving the garden looking much tidier.
                I've still got to cut down and collect a lot of the Hardy Perennial debris on the borders and dump them into a large garden sack to go in one of the Compost bins, but I'll leave that for another day.
                I had a little sit by the Wildlife pond and tried tempting the fish with a little fish flakes but they weren't all that interested, but only a day ago were in a feeding mood. I also saw that I would have to skim the pond with a net to gather up a lot of leavess that were floating on the surface, while also having to clean up the paved area where the bench is......the jobs keep coming but I'm not complaining as it keeps me through the dark days of the Winter. I know it sounds silly but there are times when I suddenly stop mid gardening jobs and realise just how much I love the garden and how many memories are entangled in it.:love30: There are some things in Life that you can't put a price on.!
                Needless to say, while I'm doing all this, my Cat (Jenny) has opted for the Sofa and a snooze:dunno::heehee::cat-kittyandsmiley::coffee:
                 
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                • shiney

                  shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                  I did more leafing and a lot of pressure hosing. Back aches now :sad:
                   
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                  • ARMANDII

                    ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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                    In the Green House at the moment.
                    upload_2019-12-7_16-24-49.png

                    upload_2019-12-7_16-25-33.png

                    The Triffid Collection, with 3 "Monkey Cups, a Venus Fly Trap, and a Large Sarracenia to come.
                    upload_2019-12-7_16-26-20.png

                    The Garrya is reaching 12' in height but not so many tassels this year as last year so I might give it a feed next Spring.
                    upload_2019-12-7_16-27-20.png

                    Last year........
                    upload_2019-12-7_16-39-42.png
                     

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                    • Sian in Belgium

                      Sian in Belgium Total Gardener

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                      We had the first mild, dry day for weeks yesterday. (Either torrential rain, frost lying on parts of the garden all day with highs of 3c, or ice-cold drizzle).

                      So I was out in the garden at 9am, clearing the bean sticks, weeding the raised veg beds, cutting back the perennial rocket... accidentally found my area of dogwood cuttings. Oops - one less than there should be now! All with a plant label next to them, so we will see what comes next year!

                      Hubby responded positively to my call for help, and cut the grass/vacuumed up the leaves. Poor lad, at least 20 grass-box empties! I raked the leaves out of all the borders, so he could see where the grass edges were (only the 3rd time he’s grass this year, so he’s not too familiar with the curvy edges that I love!).
                      I filled both 2metre high leaf-cages with leaves, weeded the herb garden, and cleared the leaves outside on the pavement. Someone had kindly “flytipped” some garage sweepings against our wall, including a safety razor-blade, and what looked like broken-down rock wool. I have a good idea who did it - the family clearing out my lovely neighbour’s house - but I can’t prove anything. Managed to stop one guy about to let his Samoyed over the razorblade! Anyway, all carefully sealed away in a yoghurt pot in the bin, so binmen will be safe.

                      Then we sat by the pond, “fishing” for fallen leaves...

                      So much more fun to work with someone else in the garden for a change!
                       
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                      • shiney

                        shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                        You can come and work with me in my garden if you wish :whistle: :heehee:
                         
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                        • shiney

                          shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                          I've done a couple of hours pressure hosing but have given up as the wind has gotten really strong and I'm getting too wet! One advantage of the strong wind is that it has taken all the leaves off the willows. I've raked a lot of them but between the hosing and the raking my back isn't up to bending to pick them up. :old: :dunno:
                           
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                          • ARMANDII

                            ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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                            I've spent some time today in the garden checking on everything to make sure that everything is either tied down or in what shelter there is in case the forecast stormy, windy weather comes true. I've put all the empty garden bags into the Green House so that they're not added to my neighbour's collection.
                            One thing I do have to keep an eye on is the 10 or more Climbing roses attached to a now 15' long trellis, with the roses getting to the same height. It runs along the South/West bank of the Wildlife pond and so acts like a "Sail" when the winds are coming from the South or the West. The Trellis is one I made out of 2" x 1" timber from the local Timber Yard some years ago and is quite heavy and, if you add the weight and mass of the roses, it's even heavier, so I've used five 2"x4" six feet long pieces of timber set at angle as braces against the Trellis and into the pond bank. There have been times, rare, when the winds have been so strong that even the timber braces are not enough and I've found the rose trellis blown to an angle to the East.:wallbanging: Getting 15' or more of climbing roses and a heavy trellis back to being upright can be "interesting", especially when you factor in there is a pond only 3' away:hate-shocked:
                             
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                            • andrews

                              andrews Super Gardener

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                              Took advantage of the dry and cut the dead stems off the sedum and trimmed a bit of the laurel hedge. Skip is filling up so that's going tomorrow. I could get a bit more in but I'll need another skip for the rest of the hedge trimming so this one is going to clear space and tidy things up for Christmas. That and the next skip will be placed nearer the hedges that are to be cut - save on a bit of walking to and from the skip.
                              Then burnt an old shed on top of the roots of a Laurel that was cut down earlier in the year. The wind got the fire good and hot. Hopefully the root top has been burnt away.
                              Quick toasted sandwich and back to it.
                               
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