uses of a bottomless bin
practical jokes?
Looks a nice plot.
I've put some field beans in two weeks ago and not seen anything yet, but I'll report back after the weekend.
the main problem with burning weeds IMO is that they are damp and need wood to get them going - which is generally a waste of wood. However, you seem to have a good pile there for burning, so that would seem an ideal opportunity.
If you can dig out the compost and get the bindweed out, it's a perfect opportunity to burn it. Don't forget to check your woodpile for hedgehogs before you burn it. Also it's a very good way of clearing weeds - I'd put the fire somewhere you want cleared.
(For that much, if you are handy at DIY, I'd build a screen (aka a very big sieve), with a piece of mesh that fits over a wheelbarrow with an edge barrier of say 10cm tall round the edges. Then you can put some shovels full on the screen and use the barrow to riddle it back and forth and catch the sieved stuff. The real issue for that is getting fine enough mesh.)
practical jokes?
Looks a nice plot.
I've put some field beans in two weeks ago and not seen anything yet, but I'll report back after the weekend.
the main problem with burning weeds IMO is that they are damp and need wood to get them going - which is generally a waste of wood. However, you seem to have a good pile there for burning, so that would seem an ideal opportunity.
If you can dig out the compost and get the bindweed out, it's a perfect opportunity to burn it. Don't forget to check your woodpile for hedgehogs before you burn it. Also it's a very good way of clearing weeds - I'd put the fire somewhere you want cleared.
(For that much, if you are handy at DIY, I'd build a screen (aka a very big sieve), with a piece of mesh that fits over a wheelbarrow with an edge barrier of say 10cm tall round the edges. Then you can put some shovels full on the screen and use the barrow to riddle it back and forth and catch the sieved stuff. The real issue for that is getting fine enough mesh.)
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