Mark_Riga
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May 2020
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Slow roasted in olive oil then froze aubergines, sweet peppers and courgettes. As the nights are getting chillier, I cleared the pollytunnel doorways so they can shut.
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Bren
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May 2020
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Nothing in the garden but I did nip out between showers to pick some raspberries.
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JJB
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May 2020
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Managed a couple of hours in the garden before the rain really set in. I had to choose the jobs carefully, such that they could be abandoned if the rain came. Managed to get the CFBs and their sticks down and put away. Just got in for lunch and the heavens opened. Good timing for once.
Gardening is an excuse not to do housework
Greetings from Salisbury
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Veggie
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May 2020
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Last night, the camellias in front of the house, were being blown against the upstairs landing window and it sounded just like fingernails on a blackboard (if you're old enough to remember that sound  . This won't happen again, the camellias have had a haircut! Pity really as the flower buds were forming but, there are plenty more at ground floor level and I'm sure they will soon bounce back - just not against the window. Extra bonus is that I have a better view now, for when I'm sticky-beaking at whatever is happening outside.
I saved a few camellia seedpods and chopped the rest into the garden waste bin.
The Moneyless Chicken says:-
Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without.
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JJB
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May 2020
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2 hours ago
(This post was last modified: 2 hours ago by JJB.
Edit Reason: Further thoughts
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Attention was directed to the top area. A spindle bush hides some of the composts and it was getting unruly. Spindles are thugs. P set about it with the hedge trimmer. Not far from the spindle is the thug blackberry. Although it's a bit early to prune out the fruited canes, the fruit had either wizened with the heat or moulded with the wet, either way the fruiting canes had to be removed. So that was my job, kitted out in leather gauntlets and secateurs. I got away with just a few drawings of blood. Now my decision is whether to cut out some of the new growth some 15 ft long in some cases or to tip the long lengths in order to give the new thornless plant some room to thrive. I think I'll let thug have 2 or 3 ramblers rather than half a dozen and shorten some of those. I fear the shortened canes will just branch at the tips and be 'umbrellas' causing chaos at the tips. We'll see. Next year if new blackberry thrives, then thug's days will be numbered.
Gardening is an excuse not to do housework
Greetings from Salisbury
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