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What Jobs Are We Doing In The Garden Today 2020

Discussion in 'General Gardening Discussion' started by NigelJ, Jan 11, 2020.

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  1. mazambo

    mazambo Forever Learning

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    Oh yes please:dbgrtmb:
     
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    • Selleri

      Selleri Koala

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      HRRRR... the wind is rather cold! Anyways, I did what had to be done i.e. dug out the hosepipe and gave everything a really good soak. We haven't had rain for weeks and none is forecasted, which is very unusual up here.

      Tesco online has stepped up their gardening products which is a blessing as I'm not going to take a bus to pop into Wilkos. So I have grass seed, BloodFish&Bone and 4in1, but no rain to spread them. :scratch:

      The stronger seedlings (Chia and Cosmos) have been taking day trips out when the temperatures have been nice, that's another positive point of working from home. Back in the normal days I'd have to forecast the winds before seven and leave things as they are until I'm back around 5pm. Now I can monitor things all day. :)

      Round and purple carrots, boltardy beetroots and dill have germinated well in my makeshift raised bed under fleece. Lettuce is growing so well I had to make a tent out of the fleece to cover the washing up bowl they are in.

      Last weekend we finally potted up Dahlias. We have, or had, 6 dinnerplates and one Franz Kafka. The good news is that all had survived the winter in the garage, the not so good is that I had forgotten to label them so have no idea which are pink and which white. The alarming news is that all broke up a bit when potting so instead of 6, I now have 9, and room for about three :biggrin: All have now sprouted in the living room.
       
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      • andrews

        andrews Super Gardener

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        More potting on this afternoon and tidying up some of the plants ready for bringing then into the garden.

        Pricked out a half tray of Puya Chilensis and ended up with this.

        IMG_4629.jpg

        Ive used 100L of compost today so my stash is reducing rapidly. So glad that I can still get as much as I need from a friends allotment society.
         
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        • Logan

          Logan Total Gardener

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          Sowed some seeds beetroot, Chinese lettuce, little gem lettuce, pac choi and another lettuce that i can't remember.
           
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          • rustyroots

            rustyroots Total Gardener

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            Had a very lazy day today. Cleaned out chickens and composted old bedding, I have ran out of bedding so will have to go and source some tomorrow or Monday. I have pricked out cabbage and spinach and then sat on sofa listening to the local radio station that my kids school had been given a 2 hour spot on. They enjoyed listening out for their dedications and song choices, plus listening out for their mates and teachers. Whilst doing this I ordered some seeds (leeks, salad onions, parsnips, carrot and lettuce). Also found a 40 x 24 inch heat made on wish.com for £33 delivered. As I have lost the front windowsill as of next year I ordered this.

            Rusty
             
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            • Upsydaisy

              Upsydaisy Total Gardener

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              Potted on some of the Cherry tomatoes, and pricked out some more Little Gem Lettuce.

              Walked up our lane and collected nettles to make some stinky fertiliser.

              Checked on the Ziploc bags and planted up the newly germinated seedlings.

              Planted out some more Hellebores.

              Did around of dead heading.
               
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              • luciusmaximus

                luciusmaximus Total Gardener

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                No, I did not pin it down but the smell has all but gone, just a faint whiff now and again. There is Alexanders growing all along the lanes, although I've not noticed any smell emanating from them. I like them and keep hoping they will find their way into the garden. Thanks for the info links :)
                 
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                • luciusmaximus

                  luciusmaximus Total Gardener

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                  Another bike ride involving lots of hills, legs were shaking when we got back. Didn't bail septic tank yesterday so had to do double today. Not much enthusiasm for gardening but managed watering one of the baths and a few pots. Tidied up the red valerian growing along boundary wall in front garden. Dead headed a few daffs. Speaking of which, I pulled out several daffs whilst working on the cherry tree flower bed. I meant to re plant but forgot about them. They've been out of the ground for about a week. If I plant them now will they flower next year or is it too late to save them.
                   
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                  • shiney

                    shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                    @Sian in Belgium sounds like deer to me. :dunno: They eat rhubarb at this time of year when there's not too much growth elsewhere yet. If the fencing isn't tall enough you may still have problems but if there's now more growth in their natural habitat then you may be OK.
                     
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                    • shiney

                      shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                      Over the last few weeks I have been gradually digging out the noxious weeds that we have let invade our bee friendly plants by our veg plots for the last few decades. Some wild blackberries from our nearby blackberry beds, lots of couch grass, dandelions, dead nettles, bindweed, dock, buttercups and the worst culprit - strawberry weed.

                      As we haven't had rain for months I have had to put the sprinkler on the ground so that I can dig. Digging strawberry weed is the most difficult because each one needs careful digging around the plant with a trowel so as to be able to get your hand right in there to grip the root and gently pull directly upwards, gradually increasing the pull, so that the root comes out without breaking.

                      I seem to be winning :fingers crossed:
                      P1470813.JPG

                      Also, due to neglect, an elderberry was self-seeded and grew a bit out of hand.
                      P1470893.JPG

                      It only came to the forefront of my mind the other month when a 70ft poplar near it came down in the storms. I then noticed some rather large elderberry branches on the ground as well and saw that it was dying. So started cutting back.
                      P1470894.JPG

                      I then realised that it was worse than I first thought and so, on Friday, it had to go.
                      P1470940.JPG

                      P1470938.JPG

                      I also found that one of our large Choisyas (6ft diameter and 8ft tall) had areas that were dying :sad: so started cutting back. One whole section was dead and it also left holes higher up
                      P1470897.JPG

                      On closer examination I could see that the dead branches had all split at forks in the stems :scratch:. I don't know whether the drought had affected it.
                      P1470895.JPG

                      P1470896.JPG

                      On the brighter side, I've started repairing and setting up the ShineyFrames for the beans. After about 15 years some of the posts were starting to rot and needed replacing. Also some of the wires between the posts had broken but I was able to resurrect them.

                      P1470891.JPG

                      During the winter we rolled back the porous membrane, dug and composted the area and put the membrane back. I usually leave the bean roots in the ground until this time of year and then remove them ready for the new planting.

                      With the system of infrequent (twice a week) heavy watering during the hot dry weather, instead of frequent light watering, the roots develop better.
                      P1470914.JPG

                      The next two pictures are the root of one plant
                      P1470916.JPG

                      P1470952.JPG
                       
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                      • Upsydaisy

                        Upsydaisy Total Gardener

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                        @luciusmaximus ...I'd plant the daff bulbs,they should be OK I would think.:dbgrtmb:
                         
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                        • Upsydaisy

                          Upsydaisy Total Gardener

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                          Talking about trees @shiney ..if you remember I posted about my Dad's trees in his front garden a while back. Well as one was diagnosed as potentially dangerous and near the road permission was granted and he had one chopped down and the other two had a serious lopping last Friday. The Beech that was felled was apparently very badly rotted, scarily to the untrained eye you wouldn't have known...in fact it was one of the other trees that caused our original concern.:yikes:
                           
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                          • KFF

                            KFF Total Gardener

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                            Hi @luciusmaximus , as you may have seen from the "What's looking good in March " and "What's looking good in April " threads I grow around 60 different varieties of Narcissu/Daffodils.
                            If you have the room then plant them straight away at around two times the depth of the bulb ( so if the bulb is 2" high then plant at 4", if it is a baby at 1' high then plant it at 2 " deep )
                            Or you could do what I do........

                            Every year after flowering I dig a large number of them up to make way for Summer bulbs etc.
                            What I do is lay them flat on a seed tray and cover them lightly with any spare compost to save them drying out and leave them behind the greenhouse in a semi-sunny position. After the leaves have died then they're stored in paper bags until August and replanted then.
                             
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                            • Upsydaisy

                              Upsydaisy Total Gardener

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                              Think I'll do that @KFF.:blue thumb: Some of my new ones came up blind....I planted them deep enough...I think, so why?? If I dig them up as you do and replant in Aug do you think they might bloom next year?
                               
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                              • KFF

                                KFF Total Gardener

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                                Hi @Upsydaisy , it's worth a go if you have somewhere bright and airy to store them, I've been doing it for years.

                                As for blindness the main reasons are .........

                                Not planting big bulbs deep enough.

                                Planting smaller bulbs too deep
                                ( By using the method above you can sort the sizes for each one )

                                The bulbs themselves aren't mature enough ( especially if buying cheaply, they may be one year old bulblets ( offsets) or even grown from seed and so aren't mature enough).

                                They didn't receive enough moisture in the Summer. A lot of people don't realise that Narcissi/Daffodils need water from as early as the end of July beginning of August . This is because they start rooting around mid August.

                                I think that if they 've got a decent amount of foliage on them and you let this die down natuarally (it feeds the bulbs for next year ) then they should be good next year
                                 
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