SouthWesterly wrote: » I asked my wife to sow some more carrots today. I was putting 2 types in a single bed. Both packs had 2500 seeds each. She used both bags completely. Im going to have a lot of thinning out in a few weeks.
SnowyMuckish wrote: » They’re about 6 years. The only thing I notice about planting them in pots is the scent isn’t as strong as it would be if they were in the ground. I think it’s due to watering. Still it’s lovely in the evening to stand in the doorway and take it in!
Lumen wrote: » My fall on to a fence rail was unpleasantly broken by my ribs.
Lumen wrote: » This weekend I did lots of productive things in the garden, and also fell off a 4m ladder. My fall on to a fence rail was unpleasantly broken by my ribs. My family is now going to suffer weeks of me complaining about hurty ribs. Ladder safety: we (should) all know the drill, but don't ignore it. :pac:
magicbastarder wrote: » ouch. what happened - did the ladder itself fall, or did you overextend and fall off it?
magicbastarder wrote: » a relative fell off a ladder a few years ago and died; he had a heart attack, but they were unable to tell whether the fall caused or was caused by the heart attack.
Lumen wrote: » Sorry to hear that. These stories are legion. I had the very same morning had a discussion with my mother* about gardening accidents, including her friend who is currently immobilised after breaking an ankle (and not being able to get physio because COVID) and the previous owner of my house who had to sell up because he couldn't maintain the garden after....falling off a ladder whilst pruning a tree. * who spent a year recovering from broken ribs after falling off a dresser whilst removing cobwebs
CelticRambler wrote: » ... and this is why I've just bought myself a cherry picker! Way too many jobs "at height" that'll need to be done and re-done and re-re-done every decade for me to be trying to find someone to hold the bottom of the ladder, or at least be there to phone for an ambulance when I hit the ground. Of course, I reserve the right to chop my leg off with a chainsaw at ground level ... :eek:
New Home wrote: » Grebo, your avatar bears an uncanny resemblance to my hyperrealistic portrait of my brother up there.^^^ :eek:
magicbastarder wrote: » a friend of mine decided to line his chimney himself (the flexible steel liner) and was pretty much all the way up the ladder at gutter level carrying a big roll of it over his shoulder, when i think he shifted his weight to prepare to climb off the ladder, and the top of the ladder lifted gently away from the wall. he was able to shift his weight gracefully but quickly enough that the ladder settled back in place without too much drama, but it scared the bejesus out of him. standard two storey house, the gutter must be what, 5 or 6m up?
GreeBo wrote: » I've been tempted to rent one a few times but the cost put me off. I'm now saving up lots of high jobs and will probably rent one for a weekend.
Muppet Man wrote: » Lockdown boredom + imagination + paint.... happy with that
New Home wrote: » What's the white panel behind the shed for?
RonanC wrote: » I've knew literally nothing about gardening or lawn care when moving into a new build in 2018. Here is a photo of what our garden looked like in April 2018 (duck included): I've since learned a huge amount from reading this forum and other lawn care forums with these months in lockdown particularly productive. This is what it looks like now: I planted all trees and hedging (laurel and transplanted beech) myself apart from the mature Portuguese laurel on the left hand side of the photo, along with levelling the lawn and putting down 80 metres of larch edging. I only did the edging this April; in hindsight I should have done this initially as the lawn was completely taken over last summer by couchgrass and crabgrass invading from the borders. I killed most of it off in April and reseeded - there's some small bare patches but hopefully these will fill in over the coming weeks. Close up: This forum has been an invaluable resource to me so thanks to everyone who has contributed.