Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
I want this!
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...do_4098-06.JPG
If I'm correct this is the very private garden of astonishing beauty that someone told me about a few years ago. But I can't remember who! What an amazing achievement it is. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
I want this!
On Mon, 04 Feb 2013 09:54:41 +0000, Sacha wrote:
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...do_4098-06.JPG If I'm correct this is the very private garden of astonishing beauty that someone told me about a few years ago. But I can't remember who! What an amazing achievement it is. Reminds me a bit of the Japanese Garden in Portland, Oregon. Don't have the required slope here (thank goodness) or the land (pity). Cheers Dave R |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
I want this!
On 2013-02-04 11:26:11 +0000, David.WE.Roberts said:
On Mon, 04 Feb 2013 09:54:41 +0000, Sacha wrote: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...do_4098-06.JPG If I'm correct this is the very private garden of astonishing beauty that someone told me about a few years ago. But I can't remember who! What an amazing achievement it is. Reminds me a bit of the Japanese Garden in Portland, Oregon. Don't have the required slope here (thank goodness) or the land (pity). Cheers Dave R Or possibly the 10 or so gardeners which I imagine they must need! But what a wonderful place and a work of real love it seems to be. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
I want this!
On 04/02/2013 09:54, Sacha wrote:
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...do_4098-06.JPG If I'm correct this is the very private garden of astonishing beauty that someone told me about a few years ago. But I can't remember who! What an amazing achievement it is. Lovely! I'd settle for those beautiful mossy-headed trees for my woodland bank. If only I could maintain them like that. -- Spider from high ground in SE London gardening on clay |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
I want this!
On 2013-02-04 13:49:32 +0000, Spider said:
On 04/02/2013 09:54, Sacha wrote: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...do_4098-06.JPG If I'm correct this is the very private garden of astonishing beauty that someone told me about a few years ago. But I can't remember who! What an amazing achievement it is. Lovely! I'd settle for those beautiful mossy-headed trees for my woodland bank. If only I could maintain them like that. That would probably take 2 of the gardeners full time! I'd love a moss-garden and that makes me wonder if Roger's steeply sloping bank could be a moss garden? He says there's moss at the top on the lawn so... However, if the bank slopes all that steeply it may drain too well for moss to be happy. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
I want this!
On 04/02/2013 13:59, Sacha wrote:
On 2013-02-04 13:49:32 +0000, Spider said: On 04/02/2013 09:54, Sacha wrote: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...do_4098-06.JPG If I'm correct this is the very private garden of astonishing beauty that someone told me about a few years ago. But I can't remember who! What an amazing achievement it is. Lovely! I'd settle for those beautiful mossy-headed trees for my woodland bank. If only I could maintain them like that. That would probably take 2 of the gardeners full time! I'd love a moss-garden and that makes me wonder if Roger's steeply sloping bank could be a moss garden? He says there's moss at the top on the lawn so... However, if the bank slopes all that steeply it may drain too well for moss to be happy. Well, I'm on a sloping site and, as well as getting moss in damp shady places, I also get different mosses and pearlwort colonising drier, more open places. It should be possible for Roger to have a moss garden, but the danger is that there wouldn't be enough moss cover to prevent weeds and grasses getting in, especially if he has neighbours with weedy gardens. -- Spider from high ground in SE London gardening on clay |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Replacing a heather bed (was I want this!)
On 2013-02-04 15:12:55 +0000, Spider said:
On 04/02/2013 13:59, Sacha wrote: On 2013-02-04 13:49:32 +0000, Spider said: On 04/02/2013 09:54, Sacha wrote: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...do_4098-06.JPG If I'm correct this is the very private garden of astonishing beauty that someone told me about a few years ago. But I can't remember who! What an amazing achievement it is. Lovely! I'd settle for those beautiful mossy-headed trees for my woodland bank. If only I could maintain them like that. That would probably take 2 of the gardeners full time! I'd love a moss-garden and that makes me wonder if Roger's steeply sloping bank could be a moss garden? He says there's moss at the top on the lawn so... However, if the bank slopes all that steeply it may drain too well for moss to be happy. Well, I'm on a sloping site and, as well as getting moss in damp shady places, I also get different mosses and pearlwort colonising drier, more open places. It should be possible for Roger to have a moss garden, but the danger is that there wouldn't be enough moss cover to prevent weeds and grasses getting in, especially if he has neighbours with weedy gardens. Unfortunately, weeds seem to get into absolutely everything and the hell with banks like that is that weeding them through other plants is near to impossible. Without knowing it, it's hard to judge but I'd almost be inclined to let it 'go native' and strim it once a year, if that's possible. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
Replacing a heather bed (was I want this!)
On 04/02/2013 15:49, Sacha wrote:
On 2013-02-04 15:12:55 +0000, Spider said: On 04/02/2013 13:59, Sacha wrote: On 2013-02-04 13:49:32 +0000, Spider said: On 04/02/2013 09:54, Sacha wrote: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...do_4098-06.JPG If I'm correct this is the very private garden of astonishing beauty that someone told me about a few years ago. But I can't remember who! What an amazing achievement it is. Lovely! I'd settle for those beautiful mossy-headed trees for my woodland bank. If only I could maintain them like that. That would probably take 2 of the gardeners full time! I'd love a moss-garden and that makes me wonder if Roger's steeply sloping bank could be a moss garden? He says there's moss at the top on the lawn so... However, if the bank slopes all that steeply it may drain too well for moss to be happy. Well, I'm on a sloping site and, as well as getting moss in damp shady places, I also get different mosses and pearlwort colonising drier, more open places. It should be possible for Roger to have a moss garden, but the danger is that there wouldn't be enough moss cover to prevent weeds and grasses getting in, especially if he has neighbours with weedy gardens. Unfortunately, weeds seem to get into absolutely everything and the hell with banks like that is that weeding them through other plants is near to impossible. Without knowing it, it's hard to judge but I'd almost be inclined to let it 'go native' and strim it once a year, if that's possible. I daresay it's possible, but I wouldn't want to be his neighour! I have an otherwise excellent neighbour whose lawn is unkemp and rarely mowed. It is often full of weed and flowering grasses, the seed of which is blown into my garden:~(. The idea of living next to someone who strimmed his weeds once a year is almost unthinkable. -- Spider from high ground in SE London gardening on clay |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
Replacing a heather bed (was I want this!)
On 2013-02-04 16:06:33 +0000, Spider said:
On 04/02/2013 15:49, Sacha wrote: On 2013-02-04 15:12:55 +0000, Spider said: On 04/02/2013 13:59, Sacha wrote: On 2013-02-04 13:49:32 +0000, Spider said: On 04/02/2013 09:54, Sacha wrote: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...do_4098-06.JPG If I'm correct this is the very private garden of astonishing beauty that someone told me about a few years ago. But I can't remember who! What an amazing achievement it is. Lovely! I'd settle for those beautiful mossy-headed trees for my woodland bank. If only I could maintain them like that. That would probably take 2 of the gardeners full time! I'd love a moss-garden and that makes me wonder if Roger's steeply sloping bank could be a moss garden? He says there's moss at the top on the lawn so... However, if the bank slopes all that steeply it may drain too well for moss to be happy. Well, I'm on a sloping site and, as well as getting moss in damp shady places, I also get different mosses and pearlwort colonising drier, more open places. It should be possible for Roger to have a moss garden, but the danger is that there wouldn't be enough moss cover to prevent weeds and grasses getting in, especially if he has neighbours with weedy gardens. Unfortunately, weeds seem to get into absolutely everything and the hell with banks like that is that weeding them through other plants is near to impossible. Without knowing it, it's hard to judge but I'd almost be inclined to let it 'go native' and strim it once a year, if that's possible. I daresay it's possible, but I wouldn't want to be his neighour! I have an otherwise excellent neighbour whose lawn is unkemp and rarely mowed. It is often full of weed and flowering grasses, the seed of which is blown into my garden:~(. The idea of living next to someone who strimmed his weeds once a year is almost unthinkable. Wild flowers, Spider, wild flowers. ;-)) -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
Replacing a heather bed (was I want this!)
"Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2013-02-04 16:06:33 +0000, Spider said: On 04/02/2013 15:49, Sacha wrote: On 2013-02-04 15:12:55 +0000, Spider said: On 04/02/2013 13:59, Sacha wrote: On 2013-02-04 13:49:32 +0000, Spider said: On 04/02/2013 09:54, Sacha wrote: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...do_4098-06.JPG If I'm correct this is the very private garden of astonishing beauty that someone told me about a few years ago. But I can't remember who! What an amazing achievement it is. Lovely! I'd settle for those beautiful mossy-headed trees for my woodland bank. If only I could maintain them like that. That would probably take 2 of the gardeners full time! I'd love a moss-garden and that makes me wonder if Roger's steeply sloping bank could be a moss garden? He says there's moss at the top on the lawn so... However, if the bank slopes all that steeply it may drain too well for moss to be happy. Well, I'm on a sloping site and, as well as getting moss in damp shady places, I also get different mosses and pearlwort colonising drier, more open places. It should be possible for Roger to have a moss garden, but the danger is that there wouldn't be enough moss cover to prevent weeds and grasses getting in, especially if he has neighbours with weedy gardens. Unfortunately, weeds seem to get into absolutely everything and the hell with banks like that is that weeding them through other plants is near to impossible. Without knowing it, it's hard to judge but I'd almost be inclined to let it 'go native' and strim it once a year, if that's possible. I daresay it's possible, but I wouldn't want to be his neighour! I have an otherwise excellent neighbour whose lawn is unkemp and rarely mowed. It is often full of weed and flowering grasses, the seed of which is blown into my garden:~(. The idea of living next to someone who strimmed his weeds once a year is almost unthinkable. Wild flowers, Spider, wild flowers. ;-)) -- Wild? Bloody livid Sasha!! Mike -- .................................... I'm an Angel, honest ! The horns are there just to keep the halo straight. .................................... |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
Replacing a heather bed (was I want this!)
On 04/02/2013 17:10, Sacha wrote:
On 2013-02-04 16:06:33 +0000, Spider said: On 04/02/2013 15:49, Sacha wrote: On 2013-02-04 15:12:55 +0000, Spider said: On 04/02/2013 13:59, Sacha wrote: On 2013-02-04 13:49:32 +0000, Spider said: On 04/02/2013 09:54, Sacha wrote: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...do_4098-06.JPG If I'm correct this is the very private garden of astonishing beauty that someone told me about a few years ago. But I can't remember who! What an amazing achievement it is. Lovely! I'd settle for those beautiful mossy-headed trees for my woodland bank. If only I could maintain them like that. That would probably take 2 of the gardeners full time! I'd love a moss-garden and that makes me wonder if Roger's steeply sloping bank could be a moss garden? He says there's moss at the top on the lawn so... However, if the bank slopes all that steeply it may drain too well for moss to be happy. Well, I'm on a sloping site and, as well as getting moss in damp shady places, I also get different mosses and pearlwort colonising drier, more open places. It should be possible for Roger to have a moss garden, but the danger is that there wouldn't be enough moss cover to prevent weeds and grasses getting in, especially if he has neighbours with weedy gardens. Unfortunately, weeds seem to get into absolutely everything and the hell with banks like that is that weeding them through other plants is near to impossible. Without knowing it, it's hard to judge but I'd almost be inclined to let it 'go native' and strim it once a year, if that's possible. I daresay it's possible, but I wouldn't want to be his neighour! I have an otherwise excellent neighbour whose lawn is unkemp and rarely mowed. It is often full of weed and flowering grasses, the seed of which is blown into my garden:~(. The idea of living next to someone who strimmed his weeds once a year is almost unthinkable. Wild flowers, Spider, wild flowers. ;-)) Yeah yeah, Sacha. I love wild flowers. I even love a few of *their* wild flowers. I don't love weeds, mine or theirs. Anyway, Roger's garden has to satisfy SWMBO, who probably doesn't like weeds and would probably would rather have something tidy. Sadly wild flowers rarely do 'tidy' for more than one season. That's because they're *wild* :@)). Do let me know if you want some "wild flower" seed;~). -- Spider from high ground in SE London gardening on clay |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
Replacing a heather bed (was I want this!)
On 2013-02-04 17:29:45 +0000, Spider said:
On 04/02/2013 17:10, Sacha wrote: On 2013-02-04 16:06:33 +0000, Spider said: On 04/02/2013 15:49, Sacha wrote: On 2013-02-04 15:12:55 +0000, Spider said: On 04/02/2013 13:59, Sacha wrote: On 2013-02-04 13:49:32 +0000, Spider said: On 04/02/2013 09:54, Sacha wrote: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...do_4098-06.JPG If I'm correct this is the very private garden of astonishing beauty that someone told me about a few years ago. But I can't remember who! What an amazing achievement it is. Lovely! I'd settle for those beautiful mossy-headed trees for my woodland bank. If only I could maintain them like that. That would probably take 2 of the gardeners full time! I'd love a moss-garden and that makes me wonder if Roger's steeply sloping bank could be a moss garden? He says there's moss at the top on the lawn so... However, if the bank slopes all that steeply it may drain too well for moss to be happy. Well, I'm on a sloping site and, as well as getting moss in damp shady places, I also get different mosses and pearlwort colonising drier, more open places. It should be possible for Roger to have a moss garden, but the danger is that there wouldn't be enough moss cover to prevent weeds and grasses getting in, especially if he has neighbours with weedy gardens. Unfortunately, weeds seem to get into absolutely everything and the hell with banks like that is that weeding them through other plants is near to impossible. Without knowing it, it's hard to judge but I'd almost be inclined to let it 'go native' and strim it once a year, if that's possible. I daresay it's possible, but I wouldn't want to be his neighour! I have an otherwise excellent neighbour whose lawn is unkemp and rarely mowed. It is often full of weed and flowering grasses, the seed of which is blown into my garden:~(. The idea of living next to someone who strimmed his weeds once a year is almost unthinkable. Wild flowers, Spider, wild flowers. ;-)) Yeah yeah, Sacha. I love wild flowers. I even love a few of *their* wild flowers. I don't love weeds, mine or theirs. Anyway, Roger's garden has to satisfy SWMBO, who probably doesn't like weeds and would probably would rather have something tidy. Sadly wild flowers rarely do 'tidy' for more than one season. That's because they're *wild* :@)). Do let me know if you want some "wild flower" seed;~). Thanks, our own wild flowers are doing just fine. I'm not allowed to let them flourish though! ;-) -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
Replacing a heather bed (was I want this!)
Yeah yeah, Sacha. I love wild flowers. I even love a few of *their*
wild flowers. I don't love weeds, mine or theirs. Anyway, Roger's garden has to satisfy SWMBO, who probably doesn't like weeds and would probably would rather have something tidy. Sadly wild flowers rarely do 'tidy' for more than one season. That's because they're *wild* :@)). Do let me know if you want some "wild flower" seed;~). Thanks, our own wild flowers are doing just fine. I'm not allowed to let them flourish though! ;-) Wild flowers/ Don't you mean "Native Flora" |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
Replacing a heather bed (was I want this!)
On 2013-02-05 09:49:20 +0000, David Hill said:
Yeah yeah, Sacha. I love wild flowers. I even love a few of *their* wild flowers. I don't love weeds, mine or theirs. Anyway, Roger's garden has to satisfy SWMBO, who probably doesn't like weeds and would probably would rather have something tidy. Sadly wild flowers rarely do 'tidy' for more than one season. That's because they're *wild* :@)). Do let me know if you want some "wild flower" seed;~). Thanks, our own wild flowers are doing just fine. I'm not allowed to let them flourish though! ;-) Wild flowers/ Don't you mean "Native Flora" Of course, I do. Silly moi! -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
I want this!
On Mon, 04 Feb 2013 13:49:32 +0000, Spider wrote:
On 04/02/2013 09:54, Sacha wrote: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...do_4098-06.JPG If I'm correct this is the very private garden of astonishing beauty that someone told me about a few years ago. But I can't remember who! What an amazing achievement it is. Lovely! I'd settle for those beautiful mossy-headed trees for my woodland bank. If only I could maintain them like that. The man across the road has the best kept hedges on the street. His secret? He uses his hover mower on the tops to tidy them up. -- http://www.voucherfreebies.co.uk |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
do not want to loose a soil but want to grow vegetables on the slope. | Gardening | |||
do not want to loose a soil but want to grow vegetables on the slope. | Gardening | |||
do not want to loose a soil but want to grow vegetables on the slope. | Gardening | |||
here's an interesting idea for those of you who don't want war with | Gardening | |||
IF YOU WANT TO SELL YOUR BONSAI | Bonsai |