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Old 23-07-2003, 01:22 PM
wattlgirl
 
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Default preparing a garden for tenants...

I am about to rent out my house, which has an overgrown garden.
I don't want to just mulch everything, as there are bulbs coming
through (daffs, canterbury bells, and tulips) and
strawberries/camomile etc which self seeds throughout.
But I don't want the weeds (sticky weed, some awful suckering thing
and privet) to take over.
I think it is impossible, but does anyone have any ideas?
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Old 24-07-2003, 12:44 AM
Jock
 
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Default preparing a garden for tenants...

Green concrete sounds good to me at this stage.
Jock
"wattlgirl" wrote in message
om...
I am about to rent out my house, which has an overgrown garden.
I don't want to just mulch everything, as there are bulbs coming
through (daffs, canterbury bells, and tulips) and
strawberries/camomile etc which self seeds throughout.
But I don't want the weeds (sticky weed, some awful suckering thing
and privet) to take over.
I think it is impossible, but does anyone have any ideas?



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Old 24-07-2003, 01:02 PM
Andrew G
 
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Default preparing a garden for tenants...

Xref: 127.0.0.1 aus.gardens:21691

"wattlgirl" wrote in message
om...
I am about to rent out my house, which has an overgrown garden.
I don't want to just mulch everything, as there are bulbs coming
through (daffs, canterbury bells, and tulips) and
strawberries/camomile etc which self seeds throughout.
But I don't want the weeds (sticky weed, some awful suckering thing
and privet) to take over.
I think it is impossible, but does anyone have any ideas?


It's probably impossible.
Generally tenants will look after and maintain a well kept garden. Weed it
regularly, and possibly prune when needed.
If the garden is overgrown to start off with, I don't think they are going
to care for it as much, and the weeds will take over until the day they move
out, when they might do a quick tidy up.
Unless somehow you can specify in the contract that the gardens be
maintained in the current condition.

Good luck


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