Thread: My peas
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Old 15-06-2012, 11:07 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Bob Hobden Bob Hobden is offline
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Default My peas

"Christina Websell" wrote
"Bob Hobden" wrote
"Christina Websell" wrote ...

Are dire. They are only a few inches high and already flowering. I know
they are supposed to be dwarf peas..but this is ridiculous.
Is it too late to sow some more?
They had very bad cold weather and got drowned, then a spell of very hot
weather and then another drowning. Poor things have done well to survive
at all.
Should I pull them out and start again?



The mice ate all ours, all two 20ft rows. So no peas for us this year
unless I plant some earlies in July for a September crop.
--


Blimey! You must have loads of mice. Does the old idea of soaking them in
paraffin work? ISTR my grandfather used to do that.
Ever thought of adopting a "mouser"? I sometimes see adverts from the
Cat's Protection League for these cats, they are usually ex-feral kittens
that have been tamed but are still a bit too shy for for mixing in with a
family as young adults - they prefer an outdoor life, apparently ideal for
farms and stables (and possibly allotments?) I assume you'd have to keep
them in your tool shed for a while to let them settle to the area and
obviously feed them. Sounds an ideal solution for hard to home cats and
also for rodent control.
Just an idea.

Obviously we do have a lot of mice, wood mice I think from the tunnels I
find through our soil and from the mice I have seen dart out from under our
cultivator. Tried poison but it does not seem to work on them or I should
say they don't appear to eat it. There is a cat on our site somewhere, we
see him most days we are down there if there are not too many people about.
He looks young and a bit scruffy and is certainly a bit wild but does not
look undernourished. :-)

--
Regards. Bob Hobden.
Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK