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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. andrews

    andrews Super Gardener

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    Yes - typo. Less haste, more speed and all that (he says - checking all the spelling)

    Going back some time, one of the girls in the office was sending out letter to engineers. It was full of autocorrected words. It changed netware to interwar. Cant remember the rest but the letter made no sense but her theory was that autocorrect knew more than she did.
     
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    • Jasmine star

      Jasmine star Super Gardener

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      I've planted a hedge of Portuguese Laurel to try to separate the garden into 2. I'm praying to the Laurel gods they survive. :love30: I'm dying to get sewing some seeds I collected last year Snapdragon, and Delphinium but I'm really struggling to get compost at the moment. I did try some in normal garden soil a couple of weeks ago but nothing. It's so frustrating.
       
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      • Fat Controller

        Fat Controller 'Cuddly' Scottish Admin! Staff Member

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        @Jasmine star - if you have Homebase store nearby, they are open in as much that you can get counter service (the staff will go and pick your order and bring it to you), so you should be able to get compost there.
         
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        • Jasmine star

          Jasmine star Super Gardener

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          @Fat Controller thanks so much. I've just had a look there is one 4 miles away (new to the area) it's open from 9am so I'll pop there in the morning. Our local is a J parker's but they have closed until further notice.
          Thanks again :hapydancsmil:
           
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          • Fat Controller

            Fat Controller 'Cuddly' Scottish Admin! Staff Member

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            My pleasure - just to make it easier, have a look on their website to see which compost you want and take a note of the SKU number (it is usually somewhere near the top of the page) as that helps them pick it that bit faster for you. Be prepared to queue as well.
             
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            • Jasmine star

              Jasmine star Super Gardener

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              Brilliant... I'll have a look now......I'll queue as long as it takes ha I just need compost :rolleyespink:
               
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              • noisette47

                noisette47 Total Gardener

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                I've been admiring the Hostas and Geraniums that you kindly sent me, today :), @ARMANDII. I've been out slug and snail picking the last three nights as I'm determined that they won't suffer the same fate as the Iris and Clematis have this year. 30 big orange slugs on one Clematis!:hate-shocked: After the first night, I hunted out some latex gloves....they save a lot of hand scrubbing afterwards :biggrin:
                The Cayeux catalogue is addictive, isn't it? Let us know if you need GC members to do a whip-round for your Bank Manager :loll:
                 
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                • luciusmaximus

                  luciusmaximus Total Gardener

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                  Loved Egypt, visited four times :) Particularly loved Tutankhamun's tomb, Abu Simbel and Kalabsha temples.

                  @Selleri I'm digging a royal burial chamber for Roger and Dimitris :heehee::heehee::heehee:
                   
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                  • Sheal

                    Sheal Total Gardener

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                    I'm a little confused @luciusmaximus. Do you mean replacement of septic tanks as you have mentioned soakaways as plural?
                     
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                    • ARMANDII

                      ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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                      Hold your tongue, hold your tongue:doh:, I must behave, I must behave:heehee:
                       
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                      • Aldo

                        Aldo Super Gardener

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                        I made a raised bed and partially fitted it with insects netting, the rest will have to wait tomorrow.
                        This location does not get much sun, but last years, over june-august, it worked fine with radish, carrots and fennel. But the slugs destroyed them all.
                        So I am trying enclosing it completely in netting, with some velcro to remove it all quickly.
                        Then probably there are slug eggs in the soil, and I will end up using nemoatodes anyway, but worth a shot.

                        [​IMG]
                        [​IMG]

                        Made bread with my own wheat..
                        Ok, that's a lie, I do not grow wheat so I made bread with store bought flour, but I needed to tell somebody and this is a gardening forum :D
                        It was good though and the family wolfed it down, as per the image :)
                        [​IMG]

                        Made a few trays to size for my greenhouse shelves, so to fit soil blocks.
                        Tomorrow we will finally get to making the actual blocks out of mud.
                        I suspect it will end up being the only gardening activity my kid will actually enjoy :D
                        They look a bit trash, which is fair enough, given they are made out of trash, but they should work well enough.

                        [​IMG]
                         
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                        • Mike Allen

                          Mike Allen Total Gardener

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                          Thes warm days are bringing the weeds up, thick and fast. As much as I'd like to grow my own veg, I have neither the need or the space. My friendly fox, is taking care of the double digging. Sorry foxy, not there please....never mind.

                          I notice a lot of willowherb growing on the mound of water-lily. To be honest. I'm wondering if I will ever get my garden back. To the left, the downstairs neighbour appears to have given up. She isn't even bothering to cut the grass in the front garden, and the communial path is becoming overgrown with her weeds etc. Her back garden is a tip. Various stuff is growing through my fence, Ivy, jasmine, holly you name it. Next door the other side. The young chap who is now shacked up with the young woman. He worked hard and cleared the garden. Now it's full of brambles and whatever. Plus the dreaded bindweed is tugging at the fence.

                          Just imagine. Somewhere a keen gardener is living on the 18th floor of a tower block, just wishing for a garden.
                           
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                          • shiney

                            shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                            As I couldn't do much yesterday, because of having more trouble than usual with the arthritis in my thumbs and wrists, I had a go at using my non-existent DIY skills to make a spacer for the accelerator on the new mower.

                            I can't use it at the top speed and that is the only way I can grip the throttle handle without problems with my hands. So I needed to make a removable spacer so that I could grip it properly without it going too fast. The top speed (2.9 m.p.h.) is OK for long runs of lawn but no good for the manoeuvring around most of my lawns.

                            The accelerator is the lever with the green grip that makes the mower go faster the closer to the grey bar it gets
                            P1480072.JPG

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                            Holding it in different positions wouldn't normally be a problem if you didn't have trouble with your thumbs! So I thought a spacer would be the answer as I could then just close my hands around the two bars without any tension.

                            Being useless at DIY and having virtually no tools or equipment wouldn't normally be a problem as I have friends who are excellent and making things and do so as a hobby. With us being on lockdown makes it more awkward so I decided to see what I could do.

                            I found a bit of old baton lying around the garden, cut off a piece for the spacer and then needed to find something to use to make it removable. The only things I could find were some old picture hooks - and then spent ten minutes trying to find some pins to fit in their tiny holes! This was the inelegant result.

                            P1480087.JPG

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                            P1480085.JPG

                            I haven't yet been able to test it out because of other muscular problems at the moment. :doh:
                             
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                            • Upsydaisy

                              Upsydaisy Total Gardener

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                              Spent yesterday morning weeding and rearranging a few things in the raised borders along the kitchen patio.

                              Didn't bother with any Sweet Peas this year but decided that I now want a climber after all so chucked some Morning Glory seeds into a pot.... a tad late now I think.:noidea:

                              Emptied out our remaining large pots in readiness for when we collect our bags of compost on Wednesday.

                              Planted out the Peacock Orchid bulbs. They are very fickle and didn't bloom last year ....so fingers crossed.:fingers crossed:

                              Started to remove the spent Tulips. They will join the Daffs.

                              Did some more pricking out.....certainly non stop out in the garden now. But I love it!!!:gardening:
                               
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                                Last edited: Apr 27, 2020
                              • KFF

                                KFF Total Gardener

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                                Hi @Upsydaisy ,

                                Now is the perfect time to sow Morning Glory seeds.
                                I did mine on Friday, both the climbing Ipomea and the shorter , bushier Convulvulus and they're already through. The trick is to sow them late ( usually end of April beginning of May ) so that they can be planted outside after risk of frost. If you do them too early you end up with 2' gangly twining stems that never really take off when planted out.

                                Do you mean Acidanthera with Peacock Orchids ? If so then I agree with you, very very fickle. I gave up on them a couple of years ago. They would never flower for me except for one and that always came out with horrible pinky streaks and blotches on it.
                                 
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