Champion of England, yay! My very fave of all peas.
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What I did today 2012-2014
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Originally posted by Doive View PostTook a chance with my Champion of England pea seedlings, they are a good six inches tall and really needed planting out before they all grew into each other.
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Originally posted by kathyd View PostMade war on the strawberry bed, which looks more like an alien invasion. Was impossible to sort the wretched things out in situ, so decided to dig up the whole bed and replant a small number through landscaping fabric, hoping this will act as a contraceptive for the coming year... Only got half the bed done and I was kn&^%$ered, so went in for a long bath with a glass of wine and a batch of old Feb-Apr gardening mags . And now for Day 2 of the campaign *sigh *.
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Originally posted by Aberdeenplotter View Postwhatever you do, do not spray the grass with a glyphosate based weedkiller. Rhubarb seems to absorb it by the root and it will die even if there is no leaf contact/absorbtion
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dig a bit out. Couch grass has long white brittle roots. Couch grass / Royal Horticultural Society . The picture seen following that link must be of quite a young specimen because the roots can travel for yards.Last edited by Aberdeenplotter; 03-03-2013, 12:48 PM.
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Move my broadbeans from the bedroom window sill to the greenhouse (erected mice deterants), dug over greenhouse beds, went to the lottie put up a shed we made from scaffolding and blackboards and dug over 1/3 of the plot. Sown some cabbages, spring onions and night scented stocks
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Sown sweet peas, broad beans, beetroot, campsis. Potted on some scotch bonnets. Started new compost heap. Weeded pots and planters.
Made first batch of nettle tea.
Warm, lovely day!Le Sarramea https://jgsgardening.blogspot.com/
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Turned the compost (how do egg shells always manage to make their way, intact, to the bottom?). Dug in some overwintered green manure (red clover) and cut the last of the Rudolf purple sprouting broccoli.
Been dry for about a week here, but still very chilly.
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Pony club day today, so only admired the garden today when I got home. Walked around the fruit part with the boy who lives in town now. He was quite impressed with our Chia plants!Ali
My blog: feral007.com/countrylife/
Some days it's hardly worth chewing through the restraints!
One bit of old folklore wisdom says to plant tomatoes when the soil is warm enough to sit on with bare buttocks. In surburban areas, use the back of your wrist. Jackie French
Member of the Eastern Branch of the Darn Under Nutter's Club
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Cleaned and rearranged half my patio. Still need some helpful rain to wash away all the mud that made it on there.
Filled two dustbins 2/3 with mpc and popped the lids on to help warm the soil for my potatoes at the end of the month, managed to crack one of them so now need to find something to patch the hole.
Checked on the apple mint I ordered a while ago which turned up in a state, all seem to have new growth and after a quick squeeze they smell like apples, where as before they just smelled minty.
Dug up a bit of the border to see if it was dry enough to start planting flowers, very soft but not visible water, so long as we don't have any monsoon type weather things are looking good.
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