The gardening thread

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Bunnylump
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Re: The gardening thread

#41 Post by Bunnylump » Tue Jun 23, 2009 9:05 pm

OI :o
You can go off people, you know... :lol: And being as how you are a little orange flower I might have to threaten you with a lawn mower!! :mrgreen:
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Cenwulf
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Re: The gardening thread

#42 Post by Cenwulf » Tue Jun 23, 2009 9:17 pm

I have a garden, but it's without a lawn. We have an assortment of flower beds and a greenhouse. As well as the roses, camellias, house leeks, hydrangea and magnolia (amongst others) we've currently got some veg growing as well: some in the greenhouse and some outside.
The tomato plants are doing well, though they're not at the fruiting stage yet. the runner beans are climbing steadily, and the salad leaves are thriving. Still some trouble with the lettuces, as the first lot didn't come up.
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chazzie
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Re: The gardening thread

#43 Post by chazzie » Tue Jun 23, 2009 9:44 pm

That's my sort of garden - flowers and veg but no lawn that you have to keep mowing :D

Cenwulf - are you sure you're not giving a little too much info for our bunny friend....... I can feel some scheming going on to get at those lettuces :!:

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Re: The gardening thread

#44 Post by giraffe » Tue Jun 23, 2009 9:45 pm

Laura wrote:so how many points do you score in cricket for hitting a rabbit on the head????
Is it bonus points for accuracy, or minus points for cruelty?
Five if the bunny is hiding under a spare helmet! :D

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chazzie
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Re: The gardening thread

#45 Post by chazzie » Tue Jun 23, 2009 9:54 pm

I've never really been into cricket - but this gives it a new slant :D

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Bunnylump
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Re: The gardening thread

#46 Post by Bunnylump » Tue Jun 23, 2009 10:19 pm

Hmmm.

Plotting revenge...
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Laura
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Re: The gardening thread

#47 Post by Laura » Wed Jun 24, 2009 6:40 am

Serious info search now folks. My sister's birthday is on the 27th June, and when we were little, my grandad always 'raced' to see if he could get a ripe tomato by then (because he was a softie, and knew he wouldn't win). I want to know if anyone can manage one by saturday. It's probably possible further south than we are!!!

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Re: The gardening thread

#48 Post by chazzie » Wed Jun 24, 2009 8:56 am

I have one cherry tomato (first time I've grown tomatos this year) that is getting close to ripe!
I keep moving its pot round the garden to get the sun on it!
Dont know whether it will be there by Saturday

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Re: The gardening thread

#49 Post by Laura » Wed Jun 24, 2009 4:31 pm

Are you furthrer south than Yorkshire?

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Re: The gardening thread

#50 Post by chazzie » Wed Jun 24, 2009 4:46 pm

Just a little bit :!: Sitting on the South Coast - not far from Southampton :!:

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Re: The gardening thread

#51 Post by Bunnylump » Thu Jun 25, 2009 12:36 am

My stupid tomato plants haven't even flowered yet. :roll:
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Re: The gardening thread

#52 Post by chazzie » Thu Jun 25, 2009 9:27 pm

Popped into see my parents on route back from a meeting this pm, and the sister plants of my cherry tomato! have some ripe red tomatoes. So red toms in Chippenham!

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Re: The gardening thread

#53 Post by Bunnylump » Thu Jun 25, 2009 9:42 pm

I've just eaten a massive bowlful of strawberries from my back garden. YUM. :D (Mind you the slugs have eaten a massive bowl full too by the looks of it. I can't put down slug pellets because the stupid cat eats them.) :roll: Oh and before someone suggests bowls of beer embedded in the ground, no, she drinks them too. :roll:
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Re: The gardening thread

#54 Post by clvrlad » Fri Jun 26, 2009 6:16 am

how about salt :-D


dont you like slug fireworks?
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Re: The gardening thread

#55 Post by gill216 » Fri Jun 26, 2009 1:24 pm

My garden at home is the slug and snail M1. I spend fortunes on pellets that are animal & child friendly because our neighbours all have pets and / or young children around who on occasions are tempted to explore our garden.

I have solved my problem this year. Anything the slugs eat has been transported to our caravan on the East Yorkshire coast. Not a slug snail or butterfly on site. While others have beautiful pots of flowers Gill has lettuces, sprouts peppers etc. I have applied the same tactic in reverse. The seagulls keep digging out my bulbs from the pots that held them so I've brought them back to Leeds. Tumbling tomatoes (flowers but no fruit yet) and strawberries doing well in both places and I think my potatoes are ready too.
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Re: The gardening thread

#56 Post by maisie ladybird » Fri Jun 26, 2009 7:09 pm

We have both slugs and snails in our garden, but we also keep hens who absolutely love slugs and snails, so when we see any we just get the trowel and flick them over for the hens to eat - a bit gruesome, I know, but it works! :lol:

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MBH
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Re: The gardening thread

#57 Post by MBH » Fri Jun 26, 2009 11:55 pm

Have you got a couple of spare hens maisie??? Sickly, Slimey Slugs and Snails all over here :evil:

When I'm out in the garden for Jennie, I give any snails I find a cheap flight into the farmer's field next door. :mrgreen: The flight is great, but I don't know what the landing is like.

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Re: The gardening thread

#58 Post by Scurra » Sat Jun 27, 2009 12:01 am

MBH wrote:Sickly, Slimey Slugs and Snails all over here :evil:
Don't you come with bonus free Puppy Dogs' Tails as well, MBH? :)
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Re: The gardening thread

#59 Post by Bunnylump » Sat Jun 27, 2009 12:04 am

:lol: :lol:

You're next to a farmer's field MBH?* And the slugs prefer your garden to whatever they're growing over there? Now that really is poo.

*Lucky thing.
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MBH
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Re: The gardening thread

#60 Post by MBH » Sun Sep 20, 2009 11:30 pm

Some while ago, Starbucks were selling small potted Sunflowers in aid of charity, and I was duly called out with the car to 'collect' our new friends. 3 small green stalks of varying height (largest was a foot tall).

The tallest seemed to be trying to grow away from the attacking slugs and other pests. When he was tall enough to need a bamboo pole he was name 'Spike'.

The middle one withered and died, eventually vanishing entirely.

The smallest one we thought was going the same way, but it did actually survive and keep growing - at a much reduced rate. {I've called him 'Spelk' - that tells you something}

It's been facinating to watch the race up the wall of the garden shed, and this past week has seen the full flower on 'Spike' open up to the world. Little 'Spelk' actual has a head developing, and will look good when it opens as well.

Here they are:
Spike and Spelk.JPG
Spike and Spelk.JPG (55 KiB) Viewed 1424 times

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