Monday 1 December 2014
Protect Your Feet!
Safety shoes are a good idea when working in the garden. The steel toe
caps protect your toes from dropped pots, stones etc and if you choose a
type with a steel sole, this gives protection from walking on nails,
glass or other nasty stuff which might be hiding in the recesses of your
garden!
Oriental Poppies
My oriental poppies finally bloomed! I collected the seeds of these
the year before last and sowed them last year. Poppy seeds are small so
they should be sprinkled on the surface of moistened seed compost in a
tray and not covered with compost. Cover the tray with aluminium
foil, a magazine or whatever and place in a warm are until germination.
After about a week, check the tray each day and once germination occurs,
uncover the tray immediately to prevent straggling of the seedlings.
Keep the compost moist but don't over water. Seedlings can be
transplanted into pots after they acquire about 3 pairs of leaves. And
watch out for slugs!! Don't transplant into the ground until the plants
have become so large that they can survive being partially eaten by
these pests.
Leylandii Blues!
These trees could almost be called a garden pest! Leylandii or
Leyland Cypress is a fast growing tree and can reach 50 feet in 60
years. You will be familiar with Leylandii as the green/ yellowish
evergreen trees, ubiquitously used to form hedges which can soon become
unmanageable if not tamed by diligent gardeners. In some residential
areas they have been banned because of their rapid growth, and many
disputes have arisen between neighbours because of the nature of the
trees to go out of control, block light and protrude into adjacent
gardens.
Anyway, I have a back garden with a short Leylandii hedge spanning the gap between a side gate and driveway gate. The hedge was planted in the eighties, and in those days I trimmed it with a hand shears, which of course has limited ability to cut branches thicker than about 1/4 inch. Every year the trees put on new growth, becoming wider in the process as the shears could only trim back soft growth. By the time the trees had become 15 years old, they had reached a width of about 4 feet. I had bought a hedge trimmer by then, however I also discovered a serious disadvantage of many conifers, unlike deciduous trees, they can't be heavily trimmed back to old growth as they don't resprout. So the Leylandii have now reached a width of about 7 feet and are practically hollow inside!
My plan is to hollow the trees out more on the inside. Yesterday I cut out as much top growth as possible which was overhanging the hollow interior of the trees. Dead branches were removed also. By opening up the inside, this lets more light in and my plan is to plant lots of holly and laurel which can grow in lower light conditions, inside this space. Eventually the holly and laurel will take over and emerge from the inside of the trees (Sort of like a gardening version of Alien!) at which point I will remove the host Leylandii.
Anyway, I have a back garden with a short Leylandii hedge spanning the gap between a side gate and driveway gate. The hedge was planted in the eighties, and in those days I trimmed it with a hand shears, which of course has limited ability to cut branches thicker than about 1/4 inch. Every year the trees put on new growth, becoming wider in the process as the shears could only trim back soft growth. By the time the trees had become 15 years old, they had reached a width of about 4 feet. I had bought a hedge trimmer by then, however I also discovered a serious disadvantage of many conifers, unlike deciduous trees, they can't be heavily trimmed back to old growth as they don't resprout. So the Leylandii have now reached a width of about 7 feet and are practically hollow inside!
My plan is to hollow the trees out more on the inside. Yesterday I cut out as much top growth as possible which was overhanging the hollow interior of the trees. Dead branches were removed also. By opening up the inside, this lets more light in and my plan is to plant lots of holly and laurel which can grow in lower light conditions, inside this space. Eventually the holly and laurel will take over and emerge from the inside of the trees (Sort of like a gardening version of Alien!) at which point I will remove the host Leylandii.
Sunday 18 August 2013
Neodymium magnet tool for getting nuts into those hard to reach places
I eventually found an application for one of those neodymium magnets I bought from Dealextreme.com!
I had made up a bracket for attaching the old engine salvaged from a Suffolk Punch lawn mower to my cement mixer. Some of the nuts had shaken loose from vibration so it was time to replace them with lock nuts. Unfortunately clearance between the engine and back of the mixer bowl was limited so I needed some assistance getting the nuts into place so that they could be screwed onto the bolts. A standard magnetic pickup tool was out of the question and a socket was difficult to position, so I made up a right angled magnet pickup to get the nuts into place so that they could be spun onto the bolts.
You can buy various sized versions of these strong magnets here: http://dx.com/p/super-strong-rare-earth-re-magnets-20-pack-12mm-x-1mm-5964?Utm_rid=55371787&Utm_source=affiliate
I had made up a bracket for attaching the old engine salvaged from a Suffolk Punch lawn mower to my cement mixer. Some of the nuts had shaken loose from vibration so it was time to replace them with lock nuts. Unfortunately clearance between the engine and back of the mixer bowl was limited so I needed some assistance getting the nuts into place so that they could be screwed onto the bolts. A standard magnetic pickup tool was out of the question and a socket was difficult to position, so I made up a right angled magnet pickup to get the nuts into place so that they could be spun onto the bolts.
You can buy various sized versions of these strong magnets here: http://dx.com/p/super-strong-rare-earth-re-magnets-20-pack-12mm-x-1mm-5964?Utm_rid=55371787&Utm_source=affiliate
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