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Old 15-08-2013, 10:14 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Spider[_3_] Spider[_3_] is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Mar 2010
Posts: 2,165
Default Glasshouse clearance with a vengance

On 15/08/2013 17:38, David Hill wrote:
On 15/08/2013 13:55, Spider wrote:
On 14/08/2013 23:26, David Hill wrote:
On 14/08/2013 22:47, Spider wrote:
On 14/08/2013 20:04, David Hill wrote:
On 14/08/2013 19:03, Spider wrote:
On 14/08/2013 08:33, David Hill wrote:
On 13/08/2013 22:39, Spider wrote:
On 10/08/2013 18:13, David Hill wrote:
A couple of winters ago the snow brought down most of my 50ft 3
bay
glasshouse, and what with one thing and another I have been
putting
off
clearing the site.
Today I made a start, I have to get it cleared in the next week or
so as
I have a couple of smaller greenhouses coming and they are to
go on
that
site.
http://i240.photobucket.com/albums/f...psda7b2807.jpg









Taffy at an overcast side of Swansea Bay



Only just seen this. What an horrendous mess! I really don't envy
you
that job. Just clearing the green overgrowth will be a mammoth
task.

Since you've given us a 'before' pic, do give us an 'after' pic
with
the
site cleared ... and then another one with the new greenhouses in
place.
Pretty please.

Getting there slowly, but the rain forecast today wont help.I cant
say
that I can see the light at the end of the tunnel. but at least
now I
can see the tunnel.
As you say it's the over growth, Wild clematis, Jasminum
beesianum, a
rambling rose and brambles, my hands are tender, and I feel
kippered,
burning in an enclosed area the smoke was trapped several times
and I
had no way out.
Once I had the first large burn I've tried to keep it to a smaller
ongoing fire to burn as I cut.
http://i240.photobucket.com/albums/f...ps5e60612b.jpg







The depth/thickness of the growth is making it a slow job, and
having
glass mixed in means no power tools, it's all secateurs and pulling.
http://i240.photobucket.com/albums/f...psa63f2718.jpg







http://i240.photobucket.com/albums/f...psed659d94.jpg







Thinking about the Jasmine, with plants selling at around $5.00 or
more
I must have burned about £1,000's worth or more.
Taffy @ a damp side of Swansea Bay




Hope the rain stays off. Ours did; just getting a wee shower now.
Take care with all the glass around, and fire too.
Wishing you luck, from the dry end of south east England with a
raindrop
on it :~).

That should have been plants selling for £5.00 or more Not Dollars.


I guessed!

As fore the rain. on and off all day, I just wish Sacha had been a
little more specific with her request for rain.
David @ a damp side of Swansea Bay



Looks like she's going to get her wish tomorrow. You, too, perhaps.
Hope it doesn't put your bonfire out. I have mixed feelings: rain would
be good for the garden *and* I'd get my accounts done; dry and sunny
means I can mow my other lawn and pot up a handful of plants *and*
watch
the garden shrivel a bit mo~(. Oh well, I won't be idle whatever
happens!

[Oh, bye-the-way, there's no way I would pay £5 for a Jasmine yanked up
by the roots then rescued from a bonfire!. YMMV ;~)].

My bonfire is no more, I think someone stole it, it had died right down
so I put a load on top to dry then a sheet of polythene on top to keep
the rain off, this morning it had all gone.




!!! Unbelieveable!! Why would any two-legged rat possibly want that?!
No disrespect to your bonfire, of course, but the very idea is simply
brainless. No doubt you can start another, if needs be. Better get
security guards in.

Don't you mean a fire guard?





Yes, yes, very good, David :~). Should have thought of that.

--
Spider
from high ground in SE London
gardening on clay