ramblingbloke ([info]ramblingbloke) wrote,
@ 2008-05-07 22:32:00
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What's happening in the garden today?
I moved a Camelia shrub today. It was in a half whisky barrel. Pot bound. I planted it in the shrub bed. It took four of us. One to pull the trolley (me), one to pull on my belt for added power, one to push the barrel, and one to push the fellow pushing the barrel. Apart from myself the other three were at least seventy years old. It would have made a great photo.

A few days ago my car was attacked by three geese. Vicious blighters. A whiskey storage depot down south, and in years gone by, employed the services of sixteen geese to protect the maturing whiskey barrels from being stolen. This was told me by the guy who was pushing the fellow who was pushing the barrel that contained the camelia shrub.

A superb day for being outside. Very hot. Not such a good day for cake however. Two slices of delicious fruit loaf at 11.05 am was about it. Plenty of orange juice and lemonade though.

New power tool experience: yesterday I used a petrol driven scarifier. Fantastic machine, rips the moss from the lawn with frightening efficiency. Not so good on uneven surfaces, as I discovered: rips chunks of lawn out of the lawn with frightening efficiency too.

Conversations of the day: a good chat with an 87 year old as he leapt about his outbuildings explaining the merits of power tool gardening (he has it all, even a vicious looking petrol driven hoe!), and an equally pleasant conversation with another more sedate eighty seven year old who sat in his garden to keep me company as I pruned, weeded and generally pottered about doing what he once would have been able to do himself.

Tip of the day: Buy a Ross-shire Journal on friday and discover the horticultural benefits of Bulls Dung!


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[info]catsback
2008-05-09 02:50 pm UTC (link)
I particularly like your tip of the day...though would add 'Buy the Ross-shire Journal EVERY Friday (or Thursday evening...or Saturday...). We're thrilled with our colour tower which gives us added picture power: check it out!
By the way...what's the best source of butterfly bushes? Buddlhea or something like that?

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[info]ramblingbloke
2008-05-09 06:36 pm UTC (link)
Buddleia would be just perfect for the butterflies. Any old Garden Centre will do (Buddleia's are very hardy and survive most garden centres). They are really easy to grow if you have just one, you know. You need a length of stem very roughly 10 or so inches with a bud below and a bud above (or leaves below and leaves above). Strip all leaves off and bung into the ground (with a spot of compost maybe if you have any around). Then ignore completely for 3 months, just a spot of watering, and you have a new Buddleia bush. One bush can give you hordes of the things.
Great colour in the paper
I buy my RSJ on a thursday in tain co-op! And if one of my pieces is in it then I buy two (at least) and send my dad a copy.

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Replanting
(Anonymous)
2008-05-09 04:03 pm UTC (link)
Quite a story on the crew needed to move that shrub! a shame a cameraman was not there to record it!
I recently bought a new rose, a yellow climber, to replace a quite old hardy red rose that finally died over this Wisconsin winter.
A shovel was not sufficient, had to get a heavy grub hoe out to do some serious swinging at the exposed huge deep root before I succeeded in removing it from the hole so I could plant the new rose.
It looks happy & healthy so far, my other three new roses from last year survived the winter OK, had rose cones over them. haroldgilbertson@gmail.com

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