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Gran/Grandads Gardening Corner

(682 Posts)
J52 Tue 07-Mar-17 08:35:38

As suggested I thought I'd start this! smile. The season is upon us! Any good ideas etc.
So what is everyone doing in their garden, on their balcony or in the window box?

rosesarered Sun 30-Apr-17 19:33:00

Had a look today at the lawn and think the Mo Bacter is working, in fact grass is growing through in some areas!
Next week will do a weed and feed spread on it.
That's a moss treatment for lawns everyone, quite pricey but worth it.

rosesarered Sun 30-Apr-17 19:33:39

So don't scarify shysal

shysal Sun 30-Apr-17 22:20:34

Hope it is working for you roses, I shall feel bad for recommending it otherwise. The grass at the front of our houses treated with Mo Bacter by a neighbour looks unchanged so far but he uses it each year and swears by it. I spread some more on mine and watered it in as I think I didn't use enough. I bought the Lidl hand scarifier just in case but will hold off for now.

shysal Sun 30-Apr-17 22:22:28

Isn't the MB meant to be instead of a normal weed and feed?

rosesarered Sun 07-May-17 12:48:36

My azalea in a pot this morning.smile

rosesarered Sun 07-May-17 12:51:21

Ceonothus, flowers just out .

rosesarered Sun 07-May-17 12:53:18

shysal yes, the Mo Bacter is working! Grass growing through the patches and moss almost gone, hoorah! Thanks for the recommendation.

rosesarered Sun 07-May-17 12:54:27

Yes, but the rest of the lawn needs a weed and feed now.smile

shysal Sun 07-May-17 13:58:16

Your photos are beautiful Roses. The colours complement each other.
Hooray! My grass is also looking good, moss disappearing and new grass coming through. The whole garden needs a good night's steady rain. I did some watering the other day and it just ran off down the hill.
Bean sticks going up this week, I have the plants in root trainers just coming through. I shall also put some beans straight in the ground when the soil warms up a bit. I think everything will be behind this year.

rosesarered Sat 13-May-17 11:38:48

Thanks! smile
Have just returned from the garden centre, which to all gardeners is akin to a visit to a sweetie shop for children.grin
Was very restrained though, and came back with six surfinias of various colours,
A few calibrachias, and sweet peas, which I like to plant in a nice pot with canes in forming a wigwam, and site near a door,so that you get a lovely waft of scent when you go past.

Jalima1108 Sat 13-May-17 16:26:50

DH had a voucher for £5 courtesy of the GC - guess what - did we just spend the £5?
Of course not!

now, sweet peas in a pot, that gives me an idea, too late for seeds, will have to go to the Garden Centre again .......

proudnan Sat 13-May-17 19:21:41

having spent the afternoon in the garden I noticed my apple tree flowers and stems appear to be getting eaten through and cant see the culprit anyone any ideas as to what I could use to prevent this.

gillybob Sat 13-May-17 20:32:37

I've been in the garden since first thing this morning . Just came in an hour ago as realised I was hungry ! I am so pleased with myself I could burst . All my bedding ( grown from seed in my little lean-to) planted out. My honeysuckle tied up and doing well, bare patches of grass patched with turf cuttings ( thank you to whoever suggested this in my poor grass thread ) patio scrubbed. Happy days . smile

whitewave Sat 13-May-17 20:37:38

gilly and me- although I came in a bit earlier - it is the best of times isn't it?

gillybob Sat 13-May-17 20:44:34

It is whitewave smile I even managed to get DH to put my 3 paving stones down. I've only waited 4 years but why rush

Norah Sat 13-May-17 21:02:46

And, gilly, was there payment grin

gillybob Sat 13-May-17 21:59:03

The night is young Norah but he's washing the supper dishes as I type. I think he's hankering after an early night wink

Norah Sat 13-May-17 22:43:53

He definitely doubled down... grin

Dishes and garden pavers, oh the hankering. Used to be easier, says DH.

whitewave Sun 14-May-17 09:11:03

Sun after rain overnight so brilliant growing weather!! Looking at the leaves with rain drops on them glistening in the early morning sun - beautiful.

I mentioned on the morning thread how all my new bearded irises are showing their colour. I got some from Beth Chatto and some from Chailey Irises and both quite different in form. I think I will increase the bed as they really are one of my favourite flowers although don't last long, many of them are fragrant.

Tying in sweet peas today and feeding them. Got the seed free from RHS and they were sown about March and really strong healthy plants.

Divine time of year.

NfkDumpling Sun 14-May-17 12:41:15

Proudnan - do you have bullfinches in your garden? They may be beautiful (and getting scarcer) but they're beggars for taking fruit buds.

whitewave Fri 19-May-17 20:53:41

Watching GW - I didn't know that skunk cabbage was classed as alien.

NfkDumpling Fri 19-May-17 22:21:50

I saw that WW, and remembered a beautiful display of it growing at Fairhaven Water Gardens - right in the middle of the Norfolk Broads! I wonder if they've managed to dig it all up!

Nelliemoser Sat 20-May-17 00:36:37

I saw that, that skunk cabbages are magnificent plants but we really must try to avoid these invasive species. Our waterways suffer enough from that Himalayan Balsam these days.

I came home from B&Q today with two lots of 3?4 for £10. packs of petunias today. Nine plants in each pack.

One thing I have found is that the "tea bag" technology B&Q use to get their seedlings growing causes problems later.
The fabric used for the "tea bags" is very tough and the roots often have difficulty growing through and you end up with very stunted plants that cannot take up enough water.
You really need to take these wretched bags off ASAP before planting.
I have stopped putting tea bags on the compost heap because the bags are the same fabric as proper tea bags and the supposed bio-degradeable bags are still blowing about my garden after a year in my compost bin.

shysal Sat 20-May-17 08:59:59

Are any of you going to vote for the GW Golden Jubilee award for the plant which has had the greatest impact on gardening over the last 50 years? I am torn between several. I was pleased to see the GN favourite Geranium Rozanne nominated by Carol last night, but I can't say it has had a huge impact.
www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/3kN1yhy82Gl2RvT7HyPXD7b/golden-jubilee-award

whitewave Sat 20-May-17 09:17:36

I have Rozanne in the garden between 3 Olivia's a pink old English shrub from David Austin, and it does well.

Not convinced about bedding really

Adore roses, but there are loads of others plants I like.

I actually think that it is an odd mixture, some have singled out a one named plant and others a group.

So I think that Stipa would have been better as ornamental grasses as I think that they have been very influential.

Some like dahlia, roses etc have been influential down through at least the past couple of centuries and not just this century. Although I think each of the garden species have been developed over the last century - I'm thinking about the choice and imo improvement in garden roses.

Don't know what to vote for.