Jump to content

Recommended Posts

ruffers Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Blimey.

>

> I hope David logs on soon.


__________________________________________



Oh yes


... please log on Davey



There's only so much "conversation" we can have before a fight breaks out



W**F

Hi Everyone


Well it seems a lot has been happeing since I logged off last night. Anyway... many thanks for the gardening questions.


Charliecharlie the mobile shed is spot on though the colour options of red devil's offering are appealing. I'm visualising window boxes, trellis up the walls and even a raised decked patio. Yes, decking is back with a vengenace but has made leaps and bounds since it swamped our screens thanks to the delights of garden force.


Speaking of garden force ( I hope you appreciate that subtle link) I was pottering in B&Q today when I noticed that the nation's favourite Alan Titchmarch, is the champion for their 'Let's get gardening' campaign. I swooped in on the literature 'Alan's Top Tips - March' and can now report back that in addition to your existing list of tasks for the month, you can also;


Clean the greenhouse, prepare the soil for your veg and herb beds, freshen up pots contaiing winter/spring bedding and tidy up the rock garden, not forgetting to top up stone chippings.


If this continues, I could become obsolete!!


Steve T very impressed with your container planting ideas - highly ingenious. Please let us all know how they do and watch out for the slugs.


Ruffers, window boxes are great and can really make a difference if you choose the right plants.

With regards then falling off - have you thought of screwing them down on to the window sill or even quicker use a grab adhesive. Before I can recommend plants I need to know how much sunlight the sills get and also how much time you want to spend looking after the window boxes.



Happy gardening!


David Cheetham MSGD

I'm not worried about them falling off, I'm thinking of having plants which hang down from the box down the front of the building. Sorry I wasn't too clear.


Full sun, all day on that front, and I'll water them every day if that helps? Last year at the back of the balcony we grew tomatoes in bags very successfully if that's any indication.


thanks David.

There are a number of trailing plants suitable for window boxes in full sun including the liquorice plant (Helichrysum) that has silver - grey foliage and will trail to form a cascade of foliage. And, don't forget Ivy not everones favourite but there are a number with silver-grey/cream variations.


Verbena and Heuchera will also add variety and structure.


Happy gardening!


David Cheetham MSGD

Hi Sazzle


What you need is a determinate variety of tomato plant these will grow very short but bushy. This type of tomato is ideal for containers and small gardens and anyone who is new to gardening. However, keep in mind that you get one large crop as oppose to on-going crops throughout the season.


Varities include: Sub Artic Plenty, Tumbling Tom Yellow, Maskotka


I hope this helps. If you do an online search you will find a number of seed/plants companines who can supply of take a trip to you local garden centre.


Happy gardening!


David Cheetham MSGD

Have just found a fyler 'Grow your own' - informative, to the point and actually quite useful. So, think super foods this summer (mainly a whole host of berries based on this leaflet) - they are packed with antioxidants and will help to keep our bodies healthy and apparently you can do it in small gardens too!


Yes, fill up those containers and window sills with seed trays and propagators brimming with dwarf varieties of fruit and veg.


Happy Gardening!


David Cheetham MSGD

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Obviously, but they may be wrong. Not only are we coming up to another population renewal drop after the continuing effects of the baby bulge generation enter a trough,  - secondary schools are closing across many boroughs - but birth rates in the UK continue to fall (not just absolute births which are also falling as a function of the bulge unwind, but births per head). And foreign student numbers are also falling. Additionally the costs of being a student are rising, which encourages more students to go to universities close enough that they don't need accommodation but can live at home. Bubbles burst, and this may be one of them.
    • Exactly. There's also a much easier way to find out how demand and supply are interacting for student housing: look at how goddamn expensive it is! It's a huge barrier to entry for students who want to study away from home. If the price of student housing cratered, this would be great news for everyone except property developers because it would cut housing costs for students and reduce some demand on "mainstream" housing in the wider market (because students won't be looking for houseshares). These property developers (and their financiers) aren't shovelling millions of pounds into student housing because they think the market is going to crash and they're going to lose money! And if they do, it's not really my problem...
    • Just a quick question- We’re on Crystal Palace Road, backing onto Darrell Road, about midway between The Great Exhibition and The Actress, and both my daughters (late teens/early twenties) are complaining about an intermittent, very high frequency noise that they find very uncomfortable. It’s worse for the older one as she’s trying to study for the finals of her degree coming up in May, and she’s already having hospital treatment for an ear condition. The sound can even be heard from indoors with the windows closed. Neither my wife or I can hear it but it’s been going on for a few days now and I wonder if it’s one of those ultrasonic cat/dog/fox repellents, maybe connected to a movement sensor, that only registers with animals and younger people with much more sensitive hearing?    If that is the case would you mind turning it off please as it’s causing a very real problem.    Many thanks.
    • It would help if they opened times when most people needed them.  I had to send a parcel yesterday and Forest Hill post office was unexpectedly closed.  I ended up going to Sydenham, even though Lordship lane was on my way for other shopping as the Lordship Lane PO it closes at 1pm on a Saturday.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...