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To use a rotervater or not *Please advise*
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Hi Nigel . I just echo what everyone else has said about covering and digging a bit at a time ....an onerous task but will pay off in the long run. The manure problem is down to aminopryalid weedkiller residue that a fair few people have had problems with
http://www.growfruitandveg.co.uk/gra...ler_54557.htmlS*d the housework I have a lottie to dig
a batch of jam is always an act of creation ..Christine Ferber
You can't beat a bit of garden porn
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Nigel, how about if you clear the surface stuff now, then lay cardboard down over it, weighed down with heavy objects (someone on here recently advised me to do this - Zazen I think it was), and just concentrate on making one small plot weed-free for now so that you can get some stuff in now and giving you the motivation to keep going. Then you can gradually start work on the next bit and the next bit and then the next bit. Before long you will have several beds in action and more to work with. I kind of see getting an allotment (she says not having started work on one at all) as a long term investment, but there's no reason why you cant start small and work upwardsLast edited by Helgalush; 14-09-2011, 12:57 PM.
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I think your right we have bought lots of tarpaulin to cover half the plot to hopefully stop the weeds whilst we work on the other half (Yet to arrive) so hopefully a nice sunny day left to do this.
Clear a little dig a little plant a little << This was advise I was given earlier and echoed by your guys so I think thats the route I shall take thank you everyone for your advise and input and I'm sure I shall have plenty more questions soon (Totally allotment noob here)
Nigel
Originally posted by Helgalush View PostNigel, how about if you clear the surface stuff now, then lay cardboard down over it, weighed down with heavy objects (someone on here recently advised me to do this - Zazen I think it was), and just concentrate on making one small plot weed-free for now so that you can get some stuff in now and giving you the motivation to keep going. Then in early spring you can gradually start work on the next bit and the next bit and then the next bit. Before long you will have several beds in action and more to work with. I kind of see getting an allotment (she says not having started work on one at all) as a long term investment, but there's no reason why you cant start small and work upwards
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Hi Nigel and congrats on the lottie!
I got my plot just earlier this year and the scenario was exactly the same - the plot had been covered with brambles for a minimum of 12 years, that had been cut down and taken away.
This was in March so the ground was absolutely rock hard due to the dry spring so I was struggling with that, and then of course, there was the bramble roots. Every foot had a big knuckle of a bramble root. It was back breaking work, both physically and mentally. I'm afraid you'd need a monster of a rotavator to be able to deal with the 'knuckles' of the bramble roots.
I know the lady that manages the allotments here, so I gave her a ring to see if there was any chance of getting the plot ploughed, and she heard my prayers LOL A couple of weeks later, they'd been up there, ploughed the lot, and whilst it's still hard work to pull the roots out, it's by far easier, and it's not spread the weeds noticeably. That would be my advice - get it ploughed. Even if you have to pay to have it done, it'll be worth it, comparing to both the manual digging, or the rotavator (which I really don't think is feasible anyway, without seizing the motor or bending the blades lol).
Let us know how it goes Nigel, and best of luck
Tina
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Silverline GT52 Digging Hoe: Amazon.co.uk: DIY & Tools
Brilliant.
I've had to prepare, lets see, 6 plots in the last 2 years; and we do not rotavate as it just causes untold issues further down the line. Yes, in the first wee while it looks good but it's the perennials that get chopped up that all then germinate down the line that you spend many more hours getting rid of than if you had hand dug them out at the start. It's not the brambles necessarily that will regenerate - it's the others that will be the problem.
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Originally posted by binley100 View PostNigel , invest in a mattock .......I've seen someone clear their plot in no time with one.
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Originally posted by Nigelsmith View PostI think your right we have bought lots of tarpaulin to cover half the plot to hopefully stop the weeds
Originally posted by zazen999 View Postwe do not rotavate as it just causes untold issues further down the line.
You've got to get all those little roots out, don't chop them up into new plants
My plot was full of bramble roots, big old things, broke one fork. I got them out by digging, levering and sawing, bit by bit. I got new plants springing up here and there for a couple of years, but this year they seem to be goneAll gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.
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Originally posted by Nigelsmith View PostSo cmon guys spill whats a mattock ?
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