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Archive for October, 2008

Cloches And Tunnels

By admin On October 17, 2008 No Comments

Cloches are a kind of miniature portable greenhouse. Properly used they can be of great help in increasing and improving edible crops and in helping to grow ornamentals especially the tender ones.

Although small their mobility gives them an advantage over frames and with a carefully planned programme they can be in use over successive crops all year round.

They can be used to mautre crops early, to keep plants cropping longer in autumn and for ripening sub tropical crops such as melons, grapes, vines, peppers and so on. For taller crops they can be used standing on end, two round a plant.

Soil can be dried and warmed before sowing outdoors by putting them over the seed bed some weeks beforehand. Cloched strawberries will ripen at least three weeks earlier than uncloched ones.

Slightly tender herbaceous plants can be protected through winter: sweet peas, gladioli, bedding plants and half hardy annuals can be planted early and cloched and so on.

There are many types of cloches - The chase barn cloche was one of the first and there are now wire reinforced glass cloches, opaque white or clear plastic cloches and plastic sheet tunnels on wire hoops. Cloches can be barn shaped, round, flat topped or triangular.

As with greenhouses the glazing should be kept clean unless shading is applied in summer.


The Compost Heap

By admin On October 17, 2008 No Comments

Mystery surrounds the compost heap but its really just a simple means of making your own manure. Every garden should have two.

Make them side by side. Two post and wire enclosures 3 or 4 feet square mean that while one is full and rotting the other is being filled. With just one heap the whole business becomes confusing and messy.

Make both fronts removable so that the finished compost can be easily extracted.

What Goes In

All annual weeds, vegetable waste, lawn mowings, cabbage leaves, potato peelings, tea leaves, coffee grounds, pea pods, crushed egg shells and soft prunings.

What Stays Out

Thick rooted perennial weeds and woody stems. Household food (because there is the risk of encouraging rats and mice).

So far, so good, but how do you make it all turn brown? The answer is to mix all your ingredients together so that theres no concentration of one thing in one place. Firm the heap regularly by trampling. Turn a hose on it at the first sign of dryness and throw a piece of old carpet or sacking over the top to keep moisture in.

Over every 9 inch layer add a sprinkling of garden soil and a couple of handfuls of sulphate of ammonia or a propriety compost accelerator. Theres no need to turn the heap at intervals provided everything is mixed up when its put in.

Three to six months later (the cooler the weather the slower the rotting) you will be able to dig out brown and crumbly goodness and dig it in or spread it on your soil. You will notice the difference in plant growth.


Gardeners Almanac - January

By admin On October 17, 2008 No Comments
  • Send off your seed order.
  • Keep off lawns in frosty weather.
  • Plant rose bushes, trees and shrubs.
  • Prune fruit trees and bushes.
  • Spray fruit trees with a tar oil winter wash to kill pests.
  • Put rabbit guards around stems of young trees if necessary.
  • Sow exhibition onions in a greenhouse.
  • Lay turf if weather is mild and dry.
  • Firm back plants lifted by frost.
  • Dig over the vegetable plot.
  • Put plastic netting over winter brassicas to keep off pidgeons.
  • Plant three potatoes in a large flower pot in the greenhouse for an early crop.
  • Prune wisteria.
  • Knock snow off evergreens.
  • Feed birds in cold and frosty weather.
  • Prune summer flowering deciduous shrubs.
  • Melt ice on frozen pools to let fish breathe.

Garden Buildings

By admin On October 13, 2008 No Comments

Choosing the right colour and finish is especially important in the case of buildings such as conservatories and sun porches, which are extensions to the house. On the one hand they need to blend with the house and its materials, on the other they need to blend with the garden and maintain a look that is light and airy. Marston & Langinger’s range of interior and exterior paints includes an extensive selection of shades designed to suit this particular situation.

See www.marston-and-langinger.com for more information


Natural Wood Protection

By admin On October 13, 2008 No Comments

Several products are available to help maintain and preserve garden furniture with a natural wood finish. These range from stains (such as Sadolin) which protect the wood and at the same time may deepen or enrich the natural colour to proprietary oils that are applied regularly to keep the wood lubricated and nourished. As with decking, hardwoods are generally more hard wearing and durable than softwoods.