Don't think cold will help. I'd guess old and/or badly stored seed.Cannabis seeds
campanula may have some advice
Don't think cold will help. I'd guess old and/or badly stored seed.Cannabis seeds
Were they tall / dropping branches ?The council (presumably) have chopped down my two favourite plum trees just as they were about to come into blossom What butcher could do such a thing?
Bosky is into hedges isn't he? Does he have any suggestions?I've got to keep Frankie in the garden. Cornish hedge (rocks up the outside, clay in the centre) all the way round up to 5 foot with loads of smallish trees/bushes but a couple of dozen gaps with lower hedge for him to clamber through. I've plugged most of them with a dead hedge after pruning a few bushes but he still burrows his way through.
I've bought 50 hedging posts on reflection I really don't like the idea of chicken wire all the way around. I'm thinking of buying 50 mixed hazel/wild cherry/beech/hornbeam bare rooted trees and dropping one into each post hole, perhaps in a piece of newspaper wrapping some compost. I've also got a lot of ash/oak that I can coppice to make bars to go across, not enough for all the way round though.
Ironic really I've been saving hawthorns and I've got a good 70 or 80 but I also really don't like the idea of Frankie injuring himself on thorns. I suppose I could put a tree guard round them - I'm thinking Frankie will stop jumping so high in a few years (he's 6).
Any suggestions/thoughts?
Yes, I've not talked to him for ages though, I'm not sure where he lives. Good point though there's bound to be something in the website he edited/built.Bosky is into hedges isn't he? Does he have any suggestions?
I'd be going with what you've done/are doing, also witch hazel is another tree that you can coppice I think?
A chicken laid it like that?I've finally managed to start getting down the allotment a bit. I've just been clearing the veg beds so far. Progress pics below.
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I unearthed a whole egg when I was digging one of the beds over earlier (see bottom left of second pic) it even had a date stamp on it.
ta again for that I wouldn't have thought to have looked at it, and it is the proper reference workBosky is into hedges isn't he? Does he have any suggestions?
I'd be going with what you've done/are doing, also witch hazel is another tree that you can coppice I think?
I put so many replacements in the gaps here, over the years, the rabbits ate most of them. The things that have done the best are hydrangea and buddleia cuttings I took off plants up the lane in passing. You def shouldn’t waste those hawthorn though. They don’t grow that well here, 50 odd, 20 years and never much blossom or berries. Whereas my friends down the lane have loads all round their garden and kept me in syrup since October 21.I've got to keep Frankie in the garden. Cornish hedge (rocks up the outside, clay in the centre) all the way round up to 5 foot with loads of smallish trees/bushes but a couple of dozen gaps with lower hedge for him to clamber through. I've plugged most of them with a dead hedge after pruning a few bushes but he still burrows his way through.
I've bought 50 hedging posts on reflection I really don't like the idea of chicken wire all the way around. I'm thinking of buying 50 mixed hazel/wild cherry/beech/hornbeam bare rooted trees and dropping one into each post hole, perhaps in a piece of newspaper wrapping some compost. I've also got a lot of ash/oak that I can coppice to make bars to go across, not enough for all the way round though.
Ironic really I've been saving hawthorns and I've got a good 70 or 80 but I also really don't like the idea of Frankie injuring himself on thorns. I suppose I could put a tree guard round them - I'm thinking Frankie will stop jumping so high in a few years (he's 6).
Any suggestions/thoughts?
I do have a buddleia that I can use thank you I'd forgotten about that too I've got a white buddleia that I got from a cutting out of the valley that I should have used as cuttings and are a proper butterfly magnet but didn't think of them (perhaps next year).I put so many replacements in the gaps here, over the years, the rabbits ate most of them. The things that have done the best are hydrangea and buddleia cuttings I took off plants up the lane in passing. You def shouldn’t waste those hawthorn though. They don’t grow that well here, 50 odd, 20 years and never much blossom or berries. Whereas my friends down the lane have loads all round their garden and kept me in syrup since October 21.
What a great siteYes, I've not talked to him for ages though, I'm not sure where he lives. Good point though there's bound to be something in the website he edited/built.
Nice, it's the top result for cornish hedges.
How much of an overhaul are you thinking about? I'm guessing you've got somewhere to sit out from where you've taken the photos. Is it big enough or would you like to extend it into the garden more or move it? Do you want to keep the lawn (the size it is) for the kids to play on? Basically, think about what you want to use it for and focus on the layout first.Hello gardening folk, I'm after some advice and encouragement please Our garden is in sore need of an overhaul, following some work last winter when we replaced the left side fence and had a new shed put in.
Sorry for crap pics:
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Neither of us is particularly skilled, enthusiastic or time-rich when it comes to horticulture but I would like to make it a nice space to be in, so any thoughts on what you'd do with it would be welcome.
The left hand side gets sun most of the day (when it's out). Soil is London clay.
I'd like to plant some nice flowering climbers along the fence, and also grow some veg - have had success with tomatoes, peppers, chillies, courgettes in the past, when I can be bothered
Will you be doing some before during and after pics?ta again for that I wouldn't have thought to have looked at it, and it is the proper reference work
I'm most of the way through relevant bits and realized that a lot of the hedges can be cut back on top - loads of ivy (has taken over much of the hedges but I can't cut them back too much because their roots are what are holding the hedge together) and lilac that I can use to block up the holes. I can use some of the poles I bought in the centre of the hedge to beef up some of the lower bits, but I'm sure I'll only need a few of them. I've also got some honeysuckle that I've brought on from cuttings, and wildflowers that the site lists as native to cornish hedges like celandine and campion that I can plug in there.
Am starting to look forward to this
Following with interest. Similar issues and that's what ours looks like on a good dayHello gardening folk, I'm after some advice and encouragement please Our garden is in sore need of an overhaul, following some work last winter when we replaced the left side fence and had a new shed put in.
Sorry for crap pics:
View attachment 364668
View attachment 364669
Neither of us is particularly skilled, enthusiastic or time-rich when it comes to horticulture but I would like to make it a nice space to be in, so any thoughts on what you'd do with it would be welcome.
The left hand side gets sun most of the day (when it's out). Soil is London clay.
I'd like to plant some nice flowering climbers along the fence, and also grow some veg - have had success with tomatoes, peppers, chillies, courgettes in the past, when I can be bothered
They're a bit like cannas but less hardy so I'd treat them the same way but give them more warmth.My ginger plant has sprouted which is cool. Not grown this before. No idea on how it grows.
Never grow them. I do spuds but most of the rest is increasingly Mediterranean type veg and salads.Turned over the veg patch to turnips?
I do like a turnip, especially the purple and white ones.Turned over the veg patch to turnips?