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18 hours ago, Bob in Denny said:

sunflower.jpg.d7769349b746e680416bbecce1ef6c48.jpg

Almost time to get the seeds going for these mofos..

I'm having a much earlier attempt at sweet peas,

p***ked off some well developed seedlings today into compartment trays

and put some straight into 'half' plastic pots on the fence,

good show last year but three weeks earlier this year.

(I normally bring on my own seeds but trying Dobbies Sweet Peas £1.99 in pot ones (ten healthy sized in each pot)

I do have a variety I sow myself just for cut flowers to hide the smell of my feet....

I'll do them usual time.

Started some titan ones a couple of weeks in the cold frame with a food bag over them to help germination. Surprisingly they have all started to shoot up and when I went to check on them today a b*****d slug has been in at one of them.

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53 minutes ago, UpInTheAyr said:

Started some titan ones a couple of weeks in the cold frame with a food bag over them to help germination. Surprisingly they have all started to shoot up and when I went to check on them today a b*****d slug has been in at one of them.

I have one of those so-called Aldi mini-greenhouses..

and place trays high as possible.

I also use coffee grounds sprinkled or as a liquid just as a protection. 

I hate slug pellets..

Sunflowers are our family plant and I have to grown more than a few..

Edit to add..

In troughs etc, I mix a handful of coffee grounds as slug deterrent and it is rich in nitrogen..

Have a google

Edited by Bob in Denny
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7 hours ago, throbber said:

I got a plastic greenhouse from dobbies for £30 yestedsy so I could plant my begonia and dahlia in nice and early.

Has anyone else got one? I have added a few bits and bobs to try and keep it a bit warmer inside as it isn’t the most robust thing going but it has more area than the glass ones which were more expensive. It froze over last night and the soil didn’t feel cold So I assume my plants survived. 

 

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A few good sized stones left in the sun then placed in the “greenhouse” would certainly help.

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Just now, throbber said:

I have a south facing garden 

Don’t know what it’s like down with you but it’s shite up here today. I’ve chopped back all my plants though and I’m considering cutting back a rather unruly bush later (not Mrs Mullarkey’s).

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7 minutes ago, Melanius Mullarkey said:

Don’t know what it’s like down with you but it’s shite up here today. I’ve chopped back all my plants though and I’m considering cutting back a rather unruly bush later (not Mrs Mullarkey’s).

We have a pair of absolute wallopers as neighbours. The previous owner, now sadly dead, kept a beautiful front garden, always well planted, fairly decent grass and kept the shrubs in check (as you must).

These wanks bought it 3 years ago and have done - this isnt a joke - nothing. Absolutely f**k all. Her old dad has been in twice and cut the hedge/grass as they were out of control but none of the shrubs were cut - some of them were about 12 feet high.

After 3 years, the lazy fucks got some old geezer gardener in and - inevitably - he had to cut down the shrubs right back to the wood , and now it looks like something out of a nuclear winter...................

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17 minutes ago, Leith Green said:

We have a pair of absolute wallopers as neighbours. The previous owner, now sadly dead, kept a beautiful front garden, always well planted, fairly decent grass and kept the shrubs in check (as you must).

These wanks bought it 3 years ago and have done - this isnt a joke - nothing. Absolutely f**k all. Her old dad has been in twice and cut the hedge/grass as they were out of control but none of the shrubs were cut - some of them were about 12 feet high.

After 3 years, the lazy fucks got some old geezer gardener in and - inevitably - he had to cut down the shrubs right back to the wood , and now it looks like something out of a nuclear winter...................

Plastic lawn in 3…2…1…

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3 minutes ago, Melanius Mullarkey said:

Plastic lawn in 3…2…1…

Thankfully we live in a conservation area so they couldnt do that - although laughably, despite knowing and doing fuckall about gardening they have some company come round and spray the lawn once a quarter.

Not that it will make any difference, its still covered in last autumns leaves 😆.

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I’m moving house in 3 weeks, and my new garden is all of a sudden scaring the shit out of me. I designed my current garden to be really low maintenance, a wee bit of grass and then a few flower pots and that’s it. My new garden must have close to 50m of planted borders, so I’m going to have to learn fast how to maintain them. Loads of grass as well, but the sellers are leaving us their ride on lawn mower, so that’ll be easy enough. The plants worry me, though. 

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4 hours ago, die hard doonhamer said:

I’m moving house in 3 weeks, and my new garden is all of a sudden scaring the shit out of me. I designed my current garden to be really low maintenance, a wee bit of grass and then a few flower pots and that’s it. My new garden must have close to 50m of planted borders, so I’m going to have to learn fast how to maintain them. Loads of grass as well, but the sellers are leaving us their ride on lawn mower, so that’ll be easy enough. The plants worry me, though. 

 

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7 hours ago, Melanius Mullarkey said:

Sun 😂

It’s that bright light behind the clouds, and will still warm stones.

7 hours ago, throbber said:

I have a south facing garden 

Cool, or actually warm, but seriously, the thermal reserve of a few decent sized stones that were exposed to any amount of light would help maintain a slightly warmer environment within the “greenhouse”. The cheap-arse greenhouse I was compelled to install had a cement paver base that kept the interior warm all night compared to outside (and also meant you had to remove plants when things warmed up or you’d bake them)

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2 minutes ago, throbber said:

I could try the stones I suppose.

i know it’s not much of a greenhouse but it’s just to get the dahlia a bit of a head start as last year I planted them in mid April and some of them weren’t flowering til September and my garden looked fairly colourless early summer. 
 

My tulips are planted at the front of my border which sits right at the bottom of the slope from my garden and I’m worried the water has just sat there too long and rotted them. I am going to raise the level a bit which will require more top soil so it doesn’t happen again next year and then hopefully I’ll get the display I wanted but I have a feeling I have drowned a good £50 worth on tulips over the winter. 

If you’re worried, it’s worth a shot and gives you some nice accents to scatter the rest of the year. Again, it’s a small help, but that’s what you were feeling the ground for. Practically speaking, even some decorative stonework/concrete pieces could do the small, it’s all about thermal mass. If you were really worried, I know a lad who used to BBQ some stones to heat them before cold nights…till he got one a bit porous and moist…

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