iamtony wrote: » 34 Clonshaugh Cl 34 Clonshaugh Cl, Clonshagh, Dublin 17, D17 F962https://goo.gl/maps/8QfLfg8v1Ru That white thing is a gazebo with the koi pond next to it, greenhouse after that and down the end is where I keep the hens and the rabbits. Imagine that, in a city. The hens probably have more room than some bedsits to be fair.
iamtony wrote: » LOL. If any of you want to fill up your water can from my pools your more than welcome. I'll be changing the water daily cause those pesky flies will end up in their and us city slickers cant handle a fly landing in our tea without making another cup never mind a pool that's just gross:)
iamtony wrote: » Clonshagh, Dublin 17. That white thing is a gazebo with the koi pond next to it, greenhouse after that and down the end is where I keep the hens and the rabbits. Imagine that, in a city. The hens probably have more room than some bedsits to be fair.
[Deleted User] wrote: » In fairness, the exact address probably wasn't necessary. Might do no harm to take that out of your post, incase anyone tries to steal your pool You're a bit further north of the city than i anticipated (not sure i'd call you 'city centre' :P ) but that's still a large enough garden in fairness. I think you're quite lucky to be the last house in the cul de sac there too (either means you're tormented with anti social behaviour, or no one ever goes down near you, and judging by the general area on Google Maps, i'd say you dont get too many issues, as the place looks quite clean and presentable (aside from the eyesore Graffiti, but that doesn't really seem to make it any further than the wall beside the green area. so i presume thats as far as the teens go, which is good). Still, if it were me, I'd be selling the house at a marked up price and moving to the middle of Cavan for much less (that's my long term plan! :P )
TomOnBoard wrote: » I think Tony will be busy enough for the next couple of weeks what with keeping his 10( or 12) pools refilled and free of critters every day and won't be having time trying to get onto Daft on his sh!te Broadband to check out his new gaff in Cavan. What's he going to do with the Koi? The Koi wouldn't last a week in Cavan! I'm not even sure the rabbits would survive the winters there either.
[Deleted User] wrote: » I think Tony was being sarcastic when he commented that he was going to fill every bit of space on front and back gardens with swimming pools, and empty and refill them every time a fly landed in one. (unless he is smart enough to do exactly that, then rent them out by the hour for people to use. Quids-in!).
PLL wrote: » Buy some 5L bottles of water from Aldi, only a couple of euro.
TomOnBoard wrote: » Ah now come on! Sure if Tony has to be going into Aldi to buy the water for his pools, he'll have no time for scooping out the dead flies and feeding them to the Koi. Ah sure if there's only 5L in each bottle, that'd take at least 105,000 bottles a week to be hauled out of Aldi. I don't think the Aldi strategy will work in fairness. But fair play, it was a good try. I don't know where Tony is. Maybe he's out the back clearing space for the pools. BuT he needs to tell us what he wants us to do. Like, I put out a call earlier and I have a load of old Mayonnaise buckets from Centra and Supermac's that'll be ready on Tuesday and they're going to want to know whether they'll need to deliver them to Clonshaugh or to Cavan...
Deleted User wrote: » In fairness, the exact address probably wasn't necessary. Might do no harm to take that out of your post, incase anyone tries to steal your pool You're a bit further north of the city than i anticipated (not sure i'd call you 'city centre' :P ) but that's still a large enough garden in fairness. I think you're quite lucky to be the last house in the cul de sac there too (either means you're tormented with anti social behaviour, or no one ever goes down near you, and judging by the general area on Google Maps, i'd say you dont get too many issues, as the place looks quite clean and presentable (aside from the eyesore Graffiti, but that doesn't really seem to make it any further than the wall beside the green area. so i presume thats as far as the teens go, which is good). Still, if it were me, I'd be selling the house at a marked up price and moving to the middle of Cavan for much less (that's my long term plan! :P )
threetrees wrote: » Maybe filling pools is insignificant, maybe people will buy and keep till another time, maybe only people outside the restricted area will buy, BUT it's the general message that's being sent out - "selling large pools during a hosepipe ban" just isn't good marketing.
xboxdad wrote: » Will freshly laid rollout lawn recover if I don't water it for a month? We just moved into our house two weeks ago and spent thousands on getting proper grass in the garden. (instead of buying furniture for the living room) The company who laid the grass said it's paramount that I water it 3 times a day. I can't afford to lose this money, so can you please advise what's the minimum I'll have to do to keep it alive?
my3cents wrote: » Three times a day is ridiculous, if you are watering properly with something like a lawn queen sprinkler then once every 3 days would be more like it.
xboxdad wrote: » Thank you! I only have a hose ATM, but I'll get whatever it takes to breach the ban as little is possible while still keeping my investment alive.
my3cents wrote: » When you do it first put some jam jars around the lawn under the spray then you'll get some idea of how much water the lawn is getting, from them you can take a guesstimate as to how long you need to leave it running each time. Google will tell you that a lawn needs and inch to and inch and a half a week but it doesn't need that much just to keep it going. About half an inch every three days will be more than enough. Also much more effective if put on late at night when its cooler and had time to soak in.
xboxdad wrote: » Thank you. Is this the rule for already established lawn or freshly laid lawn that still has to get integrated with the soil?
my3cents wrote: » An established lawn an inch or more of water a week but you only need to keep turf alive and the soil beneath it moist. Too much water at this stage won't help you.
xboxdad wrote: » Thank you, I really appreciate your help!
my3cents wrote: » I'm assuming its a new lawn laid with turf, if so the first danger sign is the turf shrinking when you see gaps between all the individual turves.
Living Off The Splash wrote: » We have a 5 litre empty bottles beside all the sinks in our house. When we run the hot tap we collect all the cold water in this container until it runs warm. We usually can collect 4 litres of cold water. This is then transferred to the cistern. We have been doing this for years. I have several raised beds with vegetables. I will water these as needs be. I do not waste water. Is it not possible for Irish Water to collect all the rainwater that fell in early Spring for use in situations like this?
TomOnBoard wrote: And, given that you live in Dub!in, ye've fook all water at the best of times. Sure aren't ye trying to hijack the Shannon these days. Just be careful about that strategy though- the culchies love to dump their sh!t directly into that river.
Living Off The Splash wrote: » Is it not possible for Irish Water to collect all the rainwater that fell in early Spring for use in situations like this?
magicbastarder wrote: » they do. they store it in these things called 'reservoirs'.