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Lidls fruit bushes
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Am off this week to start getting the new lottie sorted a bit more. Plan to get a few so that at least the soft fruit end will be looking good.
Some of us live in the past, always talking about back then. Some of us live in the future, always planning what we are going to do. And, then there are those, who neither look behind or ahead, but just enjoy the moment of right now.
Which one are you and is it how you want to be?
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I ain't got no Blueberries...............maybe now's the time to change all that.........and YES I know they are ericaceous!My Majesty made for him a garden anew in order
to present to him vegetables and all beautiful flowers.- Offerings of Thutmose III to Amon-Ra (1500 BCE)
Diversify & prosper
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Try this:
Prepare the ground by digging in composted sawdust, composted pine bark. If none of these are available, you can use peat or ericaceous compost.
Plant bushes after leaf fall (November - March). Tip back the branches and remove any flower buds before planting, so that the plant can concentrate on establishing its roots in the first year of growth.
Addition of manure to the planting hole is not advisable. Mulch newly planted blueberries with composted sawdust, sand, leaf mould, chipped pine bark, or peat (if no alternative is available).
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Beware buying fruit trees from Lidl. In 2007 I bought two apple trees - a Cox's Orange Pippin and a Granny Smith - and a cherry tree from the local Lidl store. The cherry tree died. When the apple trees produced their first fruit I discovered that the Cox's Orange Pippin is actually a variety called Ellison's Orange, and the Granny Smith is Spartan!! After much correspondence I did get a refund. The apple trees are producing but the fruit is not very flavoursome and, more to the point, not what I wanted.
Cheap is not always cheerful!!Gardening is a matter of your enthusiasm holding up until your back gets used to it.
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Originally posted by andi&di View PostTattooists??
take it they didn't have any then?
actually as i don't posess any kind of fruit bush or tree, i don't really care what they are, i have plenty of space and at £1.29 if they taste crap, i'll pull em up and plant something elseLast edited by lynda66; 06-10-2008, 12:47 AM.
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Originally posted by Gwyndy View PostBeware buying fruit trees from Lidl. In 2007 I bought two apple trees - a Cox's Orange Pippin and a Granny Smith - and a cherry tree from the local Lidl store. The cherry tree died. When the apple trees produced their first fruit I discovered that the Cox's Orange Pippin is actually a variety called Ellison's Orange, and the Granny Smith is Spartan!! After much correspondence I did get a refund. The apple trees are producing but the fruit is not very flavoursome and, more to the point, not what I wanted.
Cheap is not always cheerful!!
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