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#1
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Polytunnels ?
Am thinking of buying a "Gardman" polytunnel...My allotment is quite
exposed and fairly windy..I was thinking of putting a piece of wood on the skirts and then covering the wood with soil this would stabilise the base and also prevent draughts ??...Anyone used one of these polytunnels and have any thoughts on my ideas ? |
#2
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Polytunnels ?
On 2 Mar, 16:35, Ted wrote:
Am thinking of buying a "Gardman" polytunnel...My allotment is quite exposed and fairly windy..I was thinking of putting a piece of wood on the skirts and then covering the wood with soil this would stabilise the base and also prevent draughts ??...Anyone used one of these polytunnels and have any thoughts on my ideas ? When covering or recovering poly tunnels we used to trench along the sides, making a square sided trench, then bringing the polythene down into the trench and back out, the trench was then back filled with the soil traping the polythene against the trench walls. You could lift on the waste side of the polythene and by pressing down on the soil you could tension the polythene We started from the centre and worked out to the ends. We would then trench ther polythene in at the ends. This way we could get the sheeting as tight as a drum, esp covering in sunny weather. You would put the pheet over the frame and let the sun warm the air inside before the final fixing. David Hill |
#3
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Polytunnels ?
On 2 Mar, 16:35, Ted wrote:
Am thinking of buying a "Gardman" polytunnel...My allotment is quite exposed and fairly windy..I was thinking of putting a piece of wood on the skirts and then covering the wood with soil this would stabilise the base and also prevent draughts ??...Anyone used one of these polytunnels and have any thoughts on my ideas ? When covering or recovering poly tunnels we used to trench along the sides, making a square sided trench, then bringing the polythene down into the trench and back out, the trench was then back filled with the soil traping the polythene against the trench walls. You could lift on the waste side of the polythene and by pressing down on the soil you could tension the polythene We started from the centre and worked out to the ends. We would then trench ther polythene in at the ends. This way we could get the sheeting as tight as a drum, esp when covering in sunny weather. You would put the sheet over the frame and let the sun warm the air inside before the final fixing. David Hill |
#4
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Polytunnels ?
The message
from Dave Hill contains these words: On 2 Mar, 16:35, Ted wrote: Am thinking of buying a "Gardman" polytunnel...My allotment is quite exposed and fairly windy..I was thinking of putting a piece of wood on the skirts and then covering the wood with soil this would stabilise the base and also prevent draughts ??...Anyone used one of these polytunnels and have any thoughts on my ideas ? When covering or recovering poly tunnels we used to trench along the sides, making a square sided trench, then bringing the polythene down into the trench and back out, the trench was then back filled with the soil traping the polythene against the trench walls. I have a very strong tunnel from Northern Polytunnels in Lancashire. I live in Caithness in the far north of Scotland and it has survived five years and two hurricanes with the original poly. Having trenched in the same way as Dave, I doubled the poly back over the soil and then covered it again, making a double layer of poly and filler (no pun intended). My tunnel faces North-South. This is in my experience not ideal and I think that an East-West direction would give better results. -- Compo |
#5
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A Haygrove Polytunnel is made from polythene that's guaranteed for 5 year and tested in very strong winds.
Check out our [url=http://www.polytunneltalk.co.uk]polytunnel blog[url] to see one of our polytunnels surviving the snow of last winter. |
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