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eileen
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Recent Entries to this Blog Why I love Holland so much.
Posted: 19 May 2006
All change.
Posted: 24 Sep 2007
The bit I enjoy.
Posted: 22 Sep 2007
Almost there now.
Posted: 21 Sep 2007
Starting from scratch.
Posted: 06 Sep 2007

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eileen's Blog




Green tomatoes.

Category: Gardening tips. | Posted: Mon Feb 13, 2006 1:23 am

All those green stains on your hands after removong side shoots from your tomato plants can be hard to remove. Here's an easy way of getting rid of them:

Before washing you hands with soap cut a green tomato in half. Vigorously rub the cut sides of the tomato over the stains. Now wash your hands in the normal way. The very plant that caused the problem has cured it too!!!





This blog entry has been viewed 618 times


Carrier bags.

Category: Gardening tips. | Posted: Mon Feb 13, 2006 1:15 am

Apart from their use of transporting cowpats plastic carriers can be used to save water too!!

Large terracotta post may look wonderful on the patio but, because the clay is porous, they tend to dry out rather quickly. Simply line your pots with carrier bags before putting in your compost. Ensure that the plastic is hidden under the soil before planting. Water loss from the pots will be considerably reduced.

This blog entry has been viewed 621 times


Broom handles.

Category: Gardening tips. | Posted: Mon Feb 13, 2006 1:08 am

No more wobbly lines of veggies for me!!

I have a very easy way of making a perfectly straight drill by using a 1" diameter broom handle.

First though you must remember to prepare the soil to a level surface, firm with your feet and finish by lightly raking the top 1" of soil to loosen it.
Gently lay your broom handle on to the soil and press down to the required depth. When you remove it you have the perfect seed drill!!!

This blog entry has been viewed 672 times


Cowpats.

Category: Gardening tips. | Posted: Mon Feb 13, 2006 1:01 am

If you happen to live in the countryside with dairy herds or beef stock cattle in the surrounding fields then here's what you do:

Secrete about your person a carrier bag - Farmfoods have nice strong ones. LOL Take a walk one week-end when the weather has been warm and dry for a while and walk to the fields where all those cows are grazing. Ensure that there isn't a bull in the field before nipping over the fence though.
Be on the lookout for some completely dry cowpats, about the size of dinner plates, as they are the ideal size for 14" hanging baskets or flower tubs. Pop the pats into you carrier bag and return home with them. Crumble the pats into your compost and mix in before adding your plants. Wear gloves, of course, while doing this but amazingly there's no smell!!
You'll be the envy of your friends and neighbours as your annuals will look better, and last longer, than theirs.





This blog entry has been viewed 677 times


Babies dummies and bottle tops.

Category: Gardening tips. | Posted: Wed Feb 01, 2006 4:21 pm

No, no I'm not asking you to have a baby just to help your garden along honestly!!!
However, you're bound to know of someone who has a new infant. A daughter, grandaughter, neighbour or friend or even a local mother and toddler group you could asK for help?
Collect as many old dummies and teats from feeding bottles as you can manage. Cut off the 'nipple' - they fit perfectly on to the tops of garden canes and will save you poking yourself in the eye when you bend down to weed.

This blog entry has been viewed 945 times


Ferret droppings.

Category: Gardening tips. | Posted: Wed Feb 01, 2006 3:59 pm

Now, as you know, there are very few garden pests that cause quite as much destruction and devastation to a well-kept lawn or border than the mole.

**Please, don't even consider killing him, as that is barbaric. After all he is just going about doing his normal daily business and doesn't realise the harm he's causing.

Did you know that the natural preditor of the mole is in fact the badger - bet you didn't! !!!
Now as it is notoriously difficult to lay your hands on badger poo I've come up with an easier solution. Now a ferret, is luckily, a close relative of the badger (boy am I full of amazing facts today LOL) and poor, old Mr. Mole can't tell the difference between one poo and the other. Members of your local ferret association are only too happy to part with the stuff!! Once you've got your smelly bagful mix it in an old container with a little water to make a paste.

**It's advisable to wear a face mask unless you have a strong stomoch while doing this.

Dig out the molehills and paint the ferret-poo paste around the rim of the entrance holes. Alternatively you could just pop a mound of it down into the hole itself. The wind will take the ferret smell down into the network of tunnels. Mr Mole ambles along, stops, sniffs, gets a whiff, thinks OMG BADGER...... and scarpers!!!!!! Hopefully never to darken your garden gate again.

This blog entry has been viewed 1964 times


Guinea pigs and rabbits.

Category: Gardening tips. | Posted: Wed Feb 01, 2006 3:42 pm

Yes you did read the title correctly. Even your pets can be of use in your garden!!!

Use the straw from the weekly changes of the guinea pig or rabbit hutch. Put it in the bottom of your pea and bean trenches. A 2" layer of this straw, together with the droppings, will give a nitrogen rich boost to your plants as well as helping to conserve water in the soil.



This blog entry has been viewed 1186 times


Hairbrush.

Category: Gardening tips. | Posted: Wed Feb 01, 2006 3:38 pm

Blanket weed is (or was) the bane of my life. My pond seemed to grow the stuff like there was no tomorow!!!
A quick and easy way to deal with it is to buy a cheap, round hairbrush and tie it firmly (with waterproof tape) to the end of a garden cane or similar long piece of wood. Push the hairbrush into the weed and twist round and round. The weed wraps itself neatly around the brush allowing you to remove it completely.



This blog entry has been viewed 858 times


Grated soap.

Category: Gardening tips. | Posted: Wed Feb 01, 2006 3:34 pm

Squirrels can be a real pain to the gardener can't they? Oh they look sooooo cute when they're doing acrobatics atop your fence but when they start chewing on your fat, juicy bulbs it's quite a different matter!!! GRRRR.

You'll have to accept that squirrels are here to stay so leave out a few pieces of over - ripe fruit for them as a gesture of goodwill.

Now to your bukbs. The best squirrel deterrent know to man is GRATED SOAP!!! Get the cheapest and strongest smelling you can buy. Poundland do four cakes of nasty smelling stuff for just £1. LOL
Squirrela hate the smell too and will avoid it like the plague. Simply grate the soap and sprinkle it over the surface of the soil where your bulbs are planted. You may have to re-apply after rain but a bar of soap is certainly cheap enough and should last you all season.

This blog entry has been viewed 1277 times


A great way to use roofing felt.

Category: Gardening tips. | Posted: Wed Feb 01, 2006 3:23 pm

Here's another way to deal with those pesky slugs and snails.

If you are anything like me then you'll have ends of roofing felt rolls in your garden shed. Just the ordinary stuff you re-roofed that same shed with a few months ago remember?

Cut a hole in the middle of a 6" square of the felt, just wide enough to fit round the plant stem. Now cut a sideways slit halfway across. This is so that you can slip the square, like a collar, around the plant.
There are two reasons why this works to deter snails and slugs.

1.) The surface is very rough and hurts their underbellies. Altogether now ..... aaawww poor wittle slugsies and snailses. LOL

2.) They appear to hate the smell of the bitumen glue in the felt, especially on a warm summer's evening and they haven't cottoned on to clothes pegs on their noses yet!!!!!




This blog entry has been viewed 1415 times




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