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2 hours ago, throbber said:

Father ted I was responsible of going a bit head down arse up when I made my garden feature early this year, I used 4 tonne of top soil to raise level in back garden and wanted a few shrubs in it straight away but I should have invested more in getting the soil properly ready for the summer (this was January) I think I should have got a pitch fork and mixed loss of compost and manure through it back then and planted things later in the year but i think the soil is responsible for lack of growth as it’s too much top soil and not enough rich organic stuff.

I still think I’ll get something out of my dahlias but I’ll be better prepared for next summer.

It's never too late to fire in the chicken manure (pellets). Just throw them down on soil surface and leave nature to sort it out.

Anything that needs a boost, handful of growmore at base. It's a ph7 feed, so you can use it for everything.

Guaranteed results.

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7 hours ago, throbber said:

Father ted I was responsible of going a bit head down arse up when I made my garden feature early this year, I used 4 tonne of top soil to raise level in back garden and wanted a few shrubs in it straight away but I should have invested more in getting the soil properly ready for the summer (this was January) I think I should have got a pitch fork and mixed loss of compost and manure through it back then and planted things later in the year but i think the soil is responsible for lack of growth as it’s too much top soil and not enough rich organic stuff.

I still think I’ll get something out of my dahlias but I’ll be better prepared for next summer.

Check the pH of the soil and as FT says, add some feed in. What kind of shrubs do you have? The reason I ask is I'd say chicken manure and growmore can have a slightly high pH for things like Heather, rhododendrons, camelias and other ericaceous (acidic loving) plants. I'd use a mix of bracken and ericaceous compost if so. Just chuck it on the border and lightly fork it in. Even leaf mold and bark based compost would be good.

And I'd be watering newly planted shrubs weekly this time of year too, its been very dry where I am anyway. If you do decide to mulch with compost etc then soak the plants first then again after you've mulched - stops the mulch from sooking up all the water from the soil!

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  • 3 weeks later...
42 minutes ago, highlandmac said:

Not necessarily gardening but saw this plant whilst out,anyone able to tell me what it is?

IMG_20230710_132354.jpg

If you can upload a photo of the whole plant I might be able to tell the species / variety but Billy Jean King is 100% correct in saying Mahonia.

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On 02/07/2023 at 22:58, Busta Nut said:

best way to kill a tree?

 

Chainsaw.

After that you could "ring" the tree by cutting just a bit deeper than the bark all the way round the trunk. It's essentially slitting the trees throat.

Drill some big downwards angled holes and pour in some strong weed killer. May have to do it a few times though.

I've never seen a copper nail kill a tree before but if it does work I'd imagine you'd need loads to kill a tree. Especially a medium to large tree. 

A combo would certainly do some real damage to a tree. What kind of tree is it?

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This morning's bounty. Last pull of rhubarb but will make a nice crumble today. Strawberries likewise just about done, maybe one more pick coming but a poor summer for them. Peas are brilliant as are the beans but been sold a pup as they were French bean seeds allegedly but clearly a variety of runners which is annoying as I have a row of them coming on nicely for later in the season. Will say to the garden centre where I bought them next time I'm in. Early tatties keeping fine in the ground despite the wet weather.  A tiny bit of superficial scab but it just scrapes off. Courgettes giving me a couple a week which is plenty.

All things considered it's fine given the challenging growing conditions. 

20230716_122208.jpg

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  • 1 month later...
12 hours ago, Savage Henry said:

Bump!

I’m working on my indoor garden.  Anyone have any experience of propagating a bromeliad pup?

 

My history of propagation is patchy at best.  

Wait till the offshoots (pups) are a decent size, about a third of the size of the main plant if you can wait that long, slice off with a knife very carefully and place the new plant in its own pot. If its not got roots don't worry, It'll survive and produce roots in its own time.

The longer you leave the wee pup with mum the less time it takes to flower. But it'll still take a few years....

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