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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?

sue1169 Tue 07-Mar-17 21:47:10

Ooh shysal lol..I love them too...but love my garden and they just trashed it!!! Only a foot between our fence and stock fence and they even smashed all my ranch style fence..tore up ALL my shrubs and tall plants...problem...!!

shysal Tue 07-Mar-17 19:58:00

sue1169, I have the same problem with cattle leaning over the fence. With me it is the raspberries they eat, including the tops of the canes. It is a double fence with about a metre channel between, but they can lean and just reach. I do love seeing the cattle for the first time each year, they are so excited to be outside! There is a lovely bull who leans over and flutters his long eyelashes at me. I call him Red (Bull) due to his colouring.

sue1169 Tue 07-Mar-17 19:36:26

Do you need to move them cherrytree59? I always just leave and add to them in the following. Autumn...they seem to like that.

Cherrytree59 Tue 07-Mar-17 19:20:02

Well had lovely day working in garden. So good I forgot to go for my pneumonia jab!!

Can any GNetter tell me if its ok to clear away leaves and ferns etc where a hedgehog has been over wintering.

Izabella Tue 07-Mar-17 19:07:23

Joint efforts on our allotment share but the woodland has primroses galore, hellebores and snowdrops. The daffs are through and tulips just poking leaves through. The greenhouse is groaning with seed trays and all the raised beds have been repaired and dug as necessary. Rhubarb is being forced, broccoli cropping and kale still being enjoyed. An exciting time of year but difficult for me with one hand still although the wrist and hand are now much improved and I have full rotation after my #'s.

I weeded for England today in the sunshine, picked up various twigs and branches and managed to cover two beds to warm the soil. Looking much better and cared for already.

sue1169 Tue 07-Mar-17 18:26:13

...primroses...?

sue1169 Tue 07-Mar-17 18:23:07

Well pruning etc and moving plants around BUT trying to sort my lawn from horrendous mole damage?. Also planted new shrubs all along back flower beds as last autumn the cows leaned over the stock fence repeatadly and ate/uprooted everything they could reach!!! Asked the farmer if he would move the stock fence a foot or so back but he didnt....sheep in the field at the moment so fingers crossed..oh also rebuilt my wildlife pond...already full of newts&frogs! Primrosezs and tete a tete out in abundance...love my garden?

shysal Tue 07-Mar-17 15:18:52

Located the leak in my butt! Mended with Bitubond tape, warmed then pressed on with my cake icing smoothing tool! Seems to have done a good job, but time will tell.
It is lovely to see the blackthorn in flower in all the hedgerows, and today has been so warm (19 degrees) that I had my lunch on the patio.
Next I must clean and top up the gravel under my kitchen window. The postman put a pile of post down on it while he scanned my parcel, and managed to pick up a cat turd and spread it all over the letters and himself! That spot is a neighbourhood cat toilet. My cats tend to come indoors to use the litter trays.

merlotgran Tue 07-Mar-17 13:48:01

I grew a lot of alliums in pots over winter so they're going out now. I didn't want to plant them straight into bare soil last autumn because I wasn't sure where I wanted them to go.

Glad I waited because they're putting on lots of growth and I'm happy that they're in the right place.

Greyduster Tue 07-Mar-17 13:04:30

At the moment our garden looks such a mess with all the hedge bashing we have been doing that I can't imagine it ever looking nice again. So far, we have filled two of the huge sacks that builders deliver sand and gravel in, and have another to go. They are then going to be collected and put through a chipper. The upside is that we have an area of garden we didn't have before and a lot more light. Lots more work to do though sad.

Tizliz Tue 07-Mar-17 13:03:36

My garden is a quagmire as well, not helped by raining ALL day Saturday. I have just picked up half a wheelie bin of twigs and sticks - dog will not be happy.

MiniMouse Tue 07-Mar-17 12:59:41

shysal We had no idea this could happen, so it really shook us! Methane is an asphyxiant and uses up the available oxygen. Well, with my DH's head and most of his body in the butt, there wouldn't have been much O2 in the butt in the first place wink grin

shysal Tue 07-Mar-17 12:36:48

Warning seen and heeded, MiniMouse. I will find another way to find my leak.

Luckygirl Tue 07-Mar-17 12:27:00

Lots of cutting back of scruffy shrubs to do; and I need to decide what to do with our huge area of decking - it is wet with mouldy areas and needs something done when the weather is a bit better - I am tempted to just scrub with dilute bleach solution and a broom.

cornergran Tue 07-Mar-17 11:54:17

Cant do much yet, garden is a quagmire from constant rain. The bulbs are braving it, though, some in bloom some soon will be, primulas and primroses look great, roses are shooting well. Camelia in a tub is blooming and looks lovely. Small garden so not much work to do, but would love to be able to get started on a general tidy, gardening is my best stress reliever. smile

Swanny Tue 07-Mar-17 10:45:04

Alima I had a neighbour who grew strawberries in hanging baskets last year and had a tremendous crop. Unfortunately she has since moved so I can't ask her about the variety for you sad

MiniMouse Tue 07-Mar-17 10:35:46

WARNING! Having read Shysal's post I thought I'd just repeat what I've pm'ed to her:

Thought I'd just do a quick 'Warning' message about water butt upending. My husband did just that a couple of weeks ago and had his head inside for just a minute or so. It was full of fumes from the gunk that had got into the butt (moss off the roof etc) and unbeknown to him he was breathing in the methane! He could barely stand up after he emerged. It could well have been fatal, but luckily had a happy ending for him - damn, no life insurance claim!!!!! So, please be very careful.

TriciaF Tue 07-Mar-17 09:46:30

Growing strawberries - husband made a range of 4 rows of wooden troughs on a frame and fixed it to a south facing wall.
filled with suitable soil/ compost, and then planted. Soil needs replacing now.
It works very well, no weeding or bending down to pick the fruit. Easy to water.
I've got a photo somewhere.
We've cut the grass twice already, bit it's too weth htis week.

J52 Tue 07-Mar-17 09:45:55

Alima. I have a friend who grows great strawberries in hanging baskets. Might be worth a try, I haven't done it myself.

Glad the escallonia live on! Lovely picture Shysal I also love those anemone, spring has such delicate flowers.

Greyduster Tue 07-Mar-17 09:23:17

The only advice I can offer, Alima, is avoid the lovely strawberry pots with the individual holes in the sides. They look nice but aren't particularly practical. You will get more strawberries by growing them in large round or windowbox type containers. I dug up my strawberry bed last year. We had lots of fruit but they weren't particularly tasty.
I got an email last night from my SiL, forwarded from GS's school, asking for people to help the children with a potato growing project (not in their ears hopefully!), so I have offered my services if they are stuck for volunteers! I used to enjoy growing spuds!

rosesarered Tue 07-Mar-17 09:19:42

Shysal haha, I have an image now of a water butt walking about......so be careful!
Moss is such a problem, and ours has got to the point that we really either live with it or have it all taken away and new turf put down and then keep on top of any new moss that appears by blitzing it.Expensive though.

rosesarered Tue 07-Mar-17 09:15:05

J52 we are going to re-plant the escallonias in a different place and hope they do better.We only put them in two years ago so they are still not very big.I think they need more sun.

tanith Tue 07-Mar-17 09:14:49

I tried strawberries in those strawberry planters a few years ago but honestly for the few strawberries I got it wasn't worth the bother I think 2/3 small bowls was all I got. I did think of covering them in netting but in the end I just grew small alpines in the pots. Maybe I gave up too soon.

Minty Tue 07-Mar-17 09:12:36

I love this time of the year, everything just ready to burst. I had some beautiful cyclamens from a neighbour several years ago, and they have spread all over my front garden. My neighbour sadly died last year, lovely to remember her every time they bloom.
Plants are full of memories, just the smell of certain flowers can instantly transport you to another time and place.

shysal Tue 07-Mar-17 09:12:17

rosesarered, I am thinking about the same things as you are! I need to give the grass its first cut when it dries out a bit more. Moss is always a problem, if I take it all out there will be little or no grass left. I usually decide that if it is green it can stay! That includes the daisies.
In my little postage stamp sized front garden there are primroses which flower most of the year, but they look their best when the Anemone Blanda come up amongst them, they make a change from the yellow of a lot of the spring flowers.
Might re-instate my water butts today, but the largest one has a slow leak which I need to locate. The best way to see it might be to upend the butt over my head and shoulders and look towards the sun, but I worry that I might get stuck!