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[Help] Gardeners Question Time.



Green Cross Code Man

Wunt be druv
Mar 30, 2006
20,781
Eastbourne
Anyone grown 'Sheila's perfume' in a container? It's a floribunda type rose and waaaaay out of my gardening knowledge and comfort zone. Mrs GCCM wants a rose for the verandah and loves the red and yellow/orange type flowers.
 




A mex eyecan

Well-known member
Nov 3, 2011
3,897
I’m after some suggestions please for a perennial to plant along side Lavender Hidcote.
its to go in an area just set back about 15” from lawn edge, so ideally nothing too big and certainly not too droopy. I guess upright to around 15”. Something red i guess would look quite nice.

Planting area is around 9’ long and I’ve currently got 3 lavender plants, my thoughts were to be a tad formal so plant it as ?,lavender, ?, lavender, ?, lavender, ?

Any suggestions please?
 


bluenitsuj

Listen to me!!!
Feb 26, 2011
4,750
Willingdon
Any veg growing experts out there.

Do these carrot seedlings look OK? From the soil to the foliage seem a bit limp/leggy?
1000008915.jpg
 


jevs

Well-known member
Mar 24, 2004
4,376
Preston Rock Garden
Anyone grown 'Sheila's perfume' in a container? It's a floribunda type rose and waaaaay out of my gardening knowledge and comfort zone. Mrs GCCM wants a rose for the verandah and loves the red and yellow/orange type flowers.
I grow it in the Rockery but not in a tub. It's a relatively short rose but it has lovely glossy leaves and sweet scented flowers. I'd imagine providing it was a big enough tub, given enough water and feed, it would be perfect.
 


Green Cross Code Man

Wunt be druv
Mar 30, 2006
20,781
Eastbourne
I grow it in the Rockery but not in a tub. It's a relatively short rose but it has lovely glossy leaves and sweet scented flowers. I'd imagine providing it was a big enough tub, given enough water and feed, it would be perfect.
Thanks, that's perfect!
 




WATFORD zero

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 10, 2003
27,816
I was caught by his Feb butchery, didn’t realise they started in winter! You should be fine as meadow wildflowers are inherently slow starters.

Two other things I do are to gently remove Dandelions with their entire tap root as they can smother, also with bare patches I planted small specimens of eg Achillea Terracotta.

Going past your house earlier and admiring your wildflower verge, I realise I have managed to grow a beautifully cultured verge of 2ft high grasses with the VERY occasional poppy, cornflower, daisy etc flower just about peeking above them :down:

I now realise that when you said 'scalp' it, you really meant to get rid of all the grasses and leave bare soil. I'm feeling far more confident about next year though and will get those posts in by the end of Jan :wink:
 


Weststander

Well-known member
Aug 25, 2011
69,469
Withdean area
Going past your house earlier and admiring your wildflower verge, I realise I have managed to grow a beautifully cultured verge of 2ft high grasses with the VERY occasional poppy, cornflower, daisy etc flower just about peeking above them :down:

I now realise that when you said 'scalp' it, you really meant to get rid of all the grasses and leave bare soil. I'm feeling far more confident about next year though and will get those posts in by the end of Jan :wink:

Buying/using Yellow-Rattle seeds also really helps. I bought too many …. @Jack Straw …. I have them in a kitchen cupboard, would they survive a dormant summer in a house?

My routine. Mow or scythe it to a ‘normal’ height in August, it’ll take several cuts with a mower. Then in say early October scalp it severely so at least half the soil is showing. Neighbours will think you’re a brut, again :lolol: . Always clear away the cut growth. Then broadcast the native chalk downland and Yellow-Rattle seeds. I split the measurement three ways for better coverage. Lightly tread down. I try to do this before certain rain.

It’ll get better each year.

I do seed again, to keep a wide variety / stop Oxeye daisies dominating.
 


Jack Straw

I look nothing like him!
Jul 7, 2003
7,126
Brighton. NOT KEMPTOWN!
Buying/using Yellow-Rattle seeds also really helps. I bought too many …. @Jack Straw …. I have them in a kitchen cupboard, would they survive a dormant summer in a house?

My routine. Mow or scythe it to a ‘normal’ height in August, it’ll take several cuts with a mower. Then in say early October scalp it severely so at least half the soil is showing. Neighbours will think you’re a brut, again :lolol: . Always clear away the cut growth. Then broadcast the native chalk downland and Yellow-Rattle seeds. I split the measurement three ways for better coverage. Lightly tread down. I try to do this before certain rain.

It’ll get better each year.

I do seed again, to keep a wide variety / stop Oxeye daisies dominating.
All you need to know re Yellow Rattle;
 








vegster

Sanity Clause
May 5, 2008
28,276






Zeberdi

“Vorsprung durch Technik”
NSC Patron
Oct 20, 2022
7,002
Can anyone recommend a barrier product I could get off Amazon that works for slugs please? Usually my copper rings and sharp gravel works but this year because of the really warm and wet weather combination, my Delphiniums and Lupins are being slowly decimated 😕

IMG_1951.jpeg
 


Coldeanseagull

Opinionated
Mar 13, 2013
8,372
Coldean
I'm having to go round every evening with a bucket of salty, soapy water and hand pick the molluscs, just to try and reduce the numbers.
I was getting over two hundred a night....two weeks later I'm down to a quarter of that....still too many
 






Coldeanseagull

Opinionated
Mar 13, 2013
8,372
Coldean
I grow a lot of juicy plants, this year has been the worst for the snotty bastards. Hand removal to try and control them because as you say, the multitude of predators of the slimy and crunchy ones just isn't cutting it this year.
I picked sixty snails off of the leaf joints of two yucca gloriosas....these are big snails, not littluns...lost about a pint of blood in doing so!
 


Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,357
Faversham
Can anyone ID this for me? Popped up spontaneously in the garden

1717961962633.png
 


A mex eyecan

Well-known member
Nov 3, 2011
3,897
Argh. Can anyone help me, please?
my lawn has a brick edging but inevitably the grass still gradually creeps over this and looks scruffy.
ive tried edging shears, tried getting on hands and knees and using hand shears, i even desperately have tried an old bread knife, how sad is that.

over the years i’ve had nothing but grief with strummers, make after bloody make. All promising ‘tangle free’ cutting lines. Bump feed, auto feed, just about any feed. All have been a pain in the arris, sometimes they learn to fly and travel swiftly across the lawn whilst i stand the other side uttering more than a few expletives.

This week i bit the bullet and tried yet another brand, cordless wonder tool. Roybi, auto feed, one plus. Just about every review spouting its great attributes.

I should have guessed, auto feed read tangle line, snapping off after trimming less that a few inches of lawn. I’ve taken it back and got a refund.

Can i ask the wisdom of NSC gardening fraternity, does ANYONE know if a make/model that dies actually work well, dispense the line without keep need to keep taking the head off and re feeding it back.
 




Weststander

Well-known member
Aug 25, 2011
69,469
Withdean area
Argh. Can anyone help me, please?
my lawn has a brick edging but inevitably the grass still gradually creeps over this and looks scruffy.
ive tried edging shears, tried getting on hands and knees and using hand shears, i even desperately have tried an old bread knife, how sad is that.

over the years i’ve had nothing but grief with strummers, make after bloody make. All promising ‘tangle free’ cutting lines. Bump feed, auto feed, just about any feed. All have been a pain in the arris, sometimes they learn to fly and travel swiftly across the lawn whilst i stand the other side uttering more than a few expletives.

This week i bit the bullet and tried yet another brand, cordless wonder tool. Roybi, auto feed, one plus. Just about every review spouting its great attributes.

I should have guessed, auto feed read tangle line, snapping off after trimming less that a few inches of lawn. I’ve taken it back and got a refund.

Can i ask the wisdom of NSC gardening fraternity, does ANYONE know if a make/model that dies actually work well, dispense the line without keep need to keep taking the head off and re feeding it back.

You can try this, obviously cutting on the lawn side of the brick edging.
https://wilkinsonsword-tools.co.uk/...range/grass-shears/long-handled-edging-shears

Also sad, I’ve used large household scissors :lolol: . But it does look a sharp lawn afterwards, people say how did you manage that?

@A mex eyecan ….. I’ve now added the weblink.
 
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