The Gardening Bed
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Re: The Gardening Bed
Perfect, Tango young man ... the dog on the lawn is a beaut too.Annoyed Grunt wrote:Do you fancy sorting mine out, Tango?
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Re: The Gardening Bed
Nah, one's enough. Lawn grows so freking quick it hardly worth while puttin the mower away.Annoyed Grunt wrote:Do you fancy sorting mine out, Tango?

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- Dujon
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Re: The Gardening Bed
O.K., Tango, 'fess up. Who does the gardening at yours? The missus? It looks right tidy but where are the spuds? 

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Re: The Gardening Bed
Tango. Get rid of the dog and get some sheep. You wont need the mower or to go out walking in the rain 

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Re: The Gardening Bed
Some in the cupboard, rest in Asda and Bolton Market.Dujon wrote:O.K., Tango, 'fess up. Who does the gardening at yours? The missus? It looks right tidy but where are the spuds? :mrgreen:

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Re: The Gardening Bed
Look what the wind's done to my spuddies 

Anyway, I've shored them up as best I can with more soil and turned them round. Any tips greatly appreciated. Should they be OK?
This is them now.



Anyway, I've shored them up as best I can with more soil and turned them round. Any tips greatly appreciated. Should they be OK?

This is them now.

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Re: The Gardening Bed
Cheers, Bish. Hope so. How are yours doing?thebish wrote:^ should be fine bruce - nay bother!
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Re: The Gardening Bed
Wow Tango, garden looks lovely. Come and do mine after Annoyed Grunts please?
Re: The Gardening Bed
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Re: The Gardening Bed
you may also have noticed the not-so-excellent unmowed lawnage!Bruce Rioja wrote:Oh, excellent spuddage, Sir

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Re: The Gardening Bed
Never mind the lawn, thebish, what about that poor nasturtium/geranium (or whatever 'um) left in its little pot seeking sunlight like a neglected child reaching for its father's arms? It's enough to make a grown man cry. 

Re: The Gardening Bed
it's the bargain bin lupin i picked up a week or so ago from the garden centre "nobody-wants-me" shelf..Dujon wrote:Never mind the lawn, thebish, what about that poor nasturtium/geranium (or whatever 'um) left in its little pot seeking sunlight like a neglected child reaching for its father's arms? It's enough to make a grown man cry.
still haven't found a space for it - and it has been pretty much eaten alive by snails...

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Re: The Gardening Bed
then rescue it. Repot, get all the current soil out and away (in case slugs have laid eggs) and give the perisher a chance. moving off ground level will help.thebish wrote:it's the bargain bin lupin i picked up a week or so ago from the garden centre "nobody-wants-me" shelf..Dujon wrote:Never mind the lawn, thebish, what about that poor nasturtium/geranium (or whatever 'um) left in its little pot seeking sunlight like a neglected child reaching for its father's arms? It's enough to make a grown man cry.
still haven't found a space for it - and it has been pretty much eaten alive by snails...
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Re: The Gardening Bed
A bulrush has appeared, totally uninvited, next to the heather at the end of my front garden. I've absolutely no idea how it got there or what I should do with it. Are bulrushes weeds?
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Re: The Gardening Bed
Best ask Moses - he's the expert.Bruce Rioja wrote:A bulrush has appeared, totally uninvited, next to the heather at the end of my front garden. I've absolutely no idea how it got there or what I should do with it. Are bulrushes weeds?
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Re: The Gardening Bed
They are in a sense but tend to need wet, undrained soil.Bruce Rioja wrote:A bulrush has appeared, totally uninvited, next to the heather at the end of my front garden. I've absolutely no idea how it got there or what I should do with it. Are bulrushes weeds?
The head,once gone to seed produced millions of seeds but your average garden won't take to them.
We used to collect them and soak them in Esso Blue before using them as flame arrows. We lived a simple life.
Last edited by bobo the clown on Sat Jun 29, 2013 9:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Not advocating mass-murder as an entirely positive experience, of course, but it had its moments.
"I understand you are a very good footballer" ... "I try".
"I understand you are a very good footballer" ... "I try".
Re: The Gardening Bed
all sorts of stuff gets in there - blown on the wind or (more likely) carried in on a bird...Bruce Rioja wrote:A bulrush has appeared, totally uninvited, next to the heather at the end of my front garden. I've absolutely no idea how it got there or what I should do with it. Are bulrushes weeds?
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