After a few days of allowing the tide to go out from the weekend's deluge and just clearing up leaves, I managed to make a bit of progress today.
There are several things on my "hit list" for this winter, the first of them being a sick looking pieris bush in the corner of the sunny part of the garden. It was originally planted to cover a tree stump after a rampant thuja tree got far too big. Despite pampering it with ericaceous compost and mulches of cocoashell for about the last 10 years, the bush has always looked rather sickly and the new red foliage is usually killed by frost, leaving it a most unattractive dead looking brown. I decided earlier this year that it would have to go. I tentatively stuck a fork in nearby, expecting to hit tree roots and prepared for a battle to get it out, but the fork went straight in and the bush came out with a gentle tug. The roots were only about 3 inches deep - no wonder the thing looked sick! There is, as far as I can tell, no trace of the thuja stump, so I now have a couple of feet more planting space for tomatoes .
Having had an unexpectedly easy time there and with a root ball to take to the tip (along with a car load of recycling) I decided to double up and go for item 2. This was one of the ferns, which when bought was about a foot high, with unusually curled foliage and really rather pretty. Over the past few years it has got bigger and bigger, outgrowing its space and blocking the path, making getting at the strawberries on the seat difficult. The pretty curled up foliage has reverted to uncurled and really rather ordinary fern leaves, and it is always the first to die down and look messy. I decided to dig that out too. That was a bit harder, but I managed it and replaced it with a stepping stone between the clumps of previously hidden dwarf lady's mantle and cyclamen.
I was about to set off for the tip when the man turned up to paint the front fence, so that job got done too. When I got back I started on the tricky job of removing the self watering trays from under the planters, as they will split if the water in them freezes. All are full of water and the tops are heavy, so its going to take me several sessions to finish it, which is why I am starting now. The leeks were the first to lose their tray - they have been bitterly disappointing. I also removed the 2 smaller trays from under the strawberries, by which time my back had had enough. Hopefully I will be able to do some more over the weekend.
There are several things on my "hit list" for this winter, the first of them being a sick looking pieris bush in the corner of the sunny part of the garden. It was originally planted to cover a tree stump after a rampant thuja tree got far too big. Despite pampering it with ericaceous compost and mulches of cocoashell for about the last 10 years, the bush has always looked rather sickly and the new red foliage is usually killed by frost, leaving it a most unattractive dead looking brown. I decided earlier this year that it would have to go. I tentatively stuck a fork in nearby, expecting to hit tree roots and prepared for a battle to get it out, but the fork went straight in and the bush came out with a gentle tug. The roots were only about 3 inches deep - no wonder the thing looked sick! There is, as far as I can tell, no trace of the thuja stump, so I now have a couple of feet more planting space for tomatoes .
Having had an unexpectedly easy time there and with a root ball to take to the tip (along with a car load of recycling) I decided to double up and go for item 2. This was one of the ferns, which when bought was about a foot high, with unusually curled foliage and really rather pretty. Over the past few years it has got bigger and bigger, outgrowing its space and blocking the path, making getting at the strawberries on the seat difficult. The pretty curled up foliage has reverted to uncurled and really rather ordinary fern leaves, and it is always the first to die down and look messy. I decided to dig that out too. That was a bit harder, but I managed it and replaced it with a stepping stone between the clumps of previously hidden dwarf lady's mantle and cyclamen.
I was about to set off for the tip when the man turned up to paint the front fence, so that job got done too. When I got back I started on the tricky job of removing the self watering trays from under the planters, as they will split if the water in them freezes. All are full of water and the tops are heavy, so its going to take me several sessions to finish it, which is why I am starting now. The leeks were the first to lose their tray - they have been bitterly disappointing. I also removed the 2 smaller trays from under the strawberries, by which time my back had had enough. Hopefully I will be able to do some more over the weekend.
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