So sorry meant shrub's it's me who is a bit slow not you'finger must have slipped.
Unite the Kingdom and Pro Palestine marches Cup 16th May 2026
Ladies would you post on a predominantly male forum on a sexual matter?
I have just spent an hour pulling weeds. Every year they get ahead of me. This year has been bad because my broken wrist (only now improving) has meant that I couldn't pull up, to get them out and find it very difficult with my left hand. I did hoe to start with, before the wrist, but had to stop.
I particularly loathe SPURGE which comes up all over. Also bindweed - which I spent time getting every bit of out earlier this year, and even thistles, a nettle and woody nightshade!
And I am not finished yet. I came in and washed my hands twice to get the stinging spurge juice off before I rub my eyes, and I know I will have to dig the whole bed over to get the bindweed out again.....
So sorry meant shrub's it's me who is a bit slow not you'finger must have slipped.
OH, did you mean "shrubs"?
Sorry. Bit slow this time of night. 
Obvious question Glamma....???
I have googled it. Nothing.
Why have the little tree scrub's gone up to £2.99 each this week from £1.99 last week,they must have been planted at the same time for goodness sake,or does this market gardener think just because I am blonde I am stupid.
bagitha - that sounds absolutely wonderful! Slightly 
I call weeds wild plants and that solves the problem. 
Without having identified all the grasses, ferns, rushes, mosses and lichens in my garden (not to mention the fungi), which would add to the numbers I'm about to give you, I've found names for/of 123 plants in my garden. Of these, 79 are wild, native plants, 5 are cultivated versions of native plants, 9 are wild not native plants, and 30 are 'cultivated'/'notsure' or naturalised. If MOG and I between us manage to keep the hedges and the grassed areas under some kind of control, we're doing well. But we bought the house because of the challenging and fairly wild garden.
In my much smaller suburban Oxfordshire garden, I had 80 wildflowers/plants and 45 cultivated.
Love 'weeds' 
Ronald thank you for taking the time to answer my plea. I will look at the link later on.
nannym,try www.gardenguides.com/video-store-canna-bulbs.html.I dont know if it will suit but you could have a look at the video
That's a good idea Joan. Never thought of using a riddler like that! 
Help please! I have a lovely canna lily growing in a pot and the flowers are just about dead now so I understand it's time to cut it down and store the bulb until next spring. My question, and forgive me if I sound incredibly stupid, is whereabouts do I cut it, how far from the actual bulb? And how do I store it? Any advice very gratefully received.
When I have a large flat patch of weeds, the kind that are hard to dig up, I get my riddler out. This is an old square polystyrene box, with a round fan guard on top, which is now the riddler. If you can't get a fan guard, any rigid tough mesh will do - about quarter or half inch squares.
Just shovel the soil, complete with weeds onto the riddler, give it a shake, the soil drops through to the box and the weeds are separated and ready to chuck away, or put in the compost or feed to the chickens. The soil is now lovely and friable and ready to sow something nice into it.
PS
To get a square polystyrene box, I cut and bound together two oblong ones.
It is easy to get rid of with any weedkiller containing glyphosate. Better to wait till the spring now though as it is better to spray when it is growing strongly.
Great idea, OGM, but not sure I could afford the young lady. I may have to resort to paying my senior GD if I can get her to soil her delicate hands!
Annobel, sorry unavailable to weed in Cheshire, suggest you ask Beyonce. Watched her performance at Glasto ( on tele, sadly).Now there's a gal who'd be up to the task....spent much of the time singing in 'weeding pose' (down on one knee). Do you think she's a closet weeder?
Grannyactivist, just spent a wonderful w/end in Devon, attending a wedding, and discovered where all the butterflies are!
Can they come to this part of Cheshire too. I've seen one painted lady, loads of cabbage whites, one gatekeeper and one speckled wood - never seen the last two before - oh and holly blues (but we're surrounded by holly (Ugh). My buddleias are almost over though - everything seems to be going over way too early this year. But the fish in my pond are multiplying like billyoh.
We are definitely low on bumble bees and butterflies in the s. midlands. As well as the cold it was a weird spring - a drought from Feb-may. Warm april. Thing coming out at the wrong time. We had blackberries in July...
Weird weather affects the insect life cycles I think.
Presumably the frosts weren't so severe in Devon. Tell them it's safe to pack their bags for Cheshire at the moment!
OGM & ANNOBEL The butterfly's are holidaying by the sea in Devon. My buddleia attracts hundreds and they're queueing up to get at the brassicas on my allotment. 
Yes, OGM, I was wondering where all the butterflies had gone. The buddleias are in full flower at the moment but not a butterfly in sight. Even last year, after a cold winter, I had quite a lot in the garden, though I'd prefer it if they weren't cabbage whites which completely destroyed a trough of rocket.
Weeds are like terrorists..... you know the saying: One person thinks terrorist, another thinks freedom fighter. Hence, I left nettles in a patch on the allottment, hoping to attract butterflies ( the right sort, of course!) Sadly, it didn't work.... where have all the butterflies gone? Took great satisfaction in pulling up the nettles tho'..... suitable gloved.
Annobel - already have a dodgy back so I always take it easy. Being tall doesn't really help either so it's always down on the knees on the old kneeling pad grubbing away at this horrible stuff. Life's too short, so I'm just doing a bit at a time.
I got a dodgy back from digging up ground elder in one of the gardens we had, so don't disable yourself, Sylvia. It isn't worth it!
Here in Cheshire where we moved back to last year I've inherited a garden with ground elder(?). Never had it before in any of my gardens and I gather it's a nightmare to get rid of - and I hate weeding!!!!! The people we bought the house from were said to love their garden - well they certainly loved ground elder. Nettles I don't mind - as they are home to ladybirds - and nettles can be controlled. With a beautiful day like today the last thing I want to do is weed.
Goose grass, sticky weed, whatever you call it - where has it all come from? I never had any in my garden until a couple of years ago. My theory is that the burrs come in on my neighbour's dogs' coats and make their merry way into my garden! Mare's tail. One of the oldest forms of life, I believe, so it's going to outlive me by a long way.
Jess, I have not a gang, but the Mafia.
Ground cover sounds attractive and I could do in on a flower bed, but the one I am weeding (now digging) had onions in it - I took them out, they haven't done well in the dry - and RUNNER BEANS. I'm mulching the beans, after pulling spurge, with what grass cuttings I have, and digging over the rest.
I want another right wrist, please. One that works.
Bindweed....I will try the idea of getting it tot grow up a cane, but as the kind I have most of is small leaved and spreads sideways, in the grass too, I don't know if it will. It pops up flowers before I know it is there. Does verdone kill it?
Carpet I tried, and it worked, but I ended up pulling old rotten pieces out of the ground. Then I had to dump them.
Registering is free, easy, and means you can join the discussion, watch threads and lots more.
Register now »Already registered? Log in with:
Gransnet »Get our top conversations, latest advice, fantastic competitions, and more, straight to your inbox. Sign up to our daily newsletter here.