Desperate Times
B&Q - What a Shambles - I have had health problems once again
and most of my plot and garden this year are well "poorly" Time then to venture to the garden centre where wheel chair access is good and you are able to borrow an electric cart The types of plants - shrubs - trees on offer were quite many and varied but! The vast majority of these specimens were dead or close to the great compost bin in the sky all to a lack of water I then went home empty handed and will now use the internet ...............Leslie |
Desperate Times
On Mon, 06 May 2013 15:45:10 +0100, Leslie
wrote: B&Q - What a Shambles - I have had health problems once again and most of my plot and garden this year are well "poorly" Time then to venture to the garden centre where wheel chair access is good and you are able to borrow an electric cart The types of plants - shrubs - trees on offer were quite many and varied but! The vast majority of these specimens were dead or close to the great compost bin in the sky all to a lack of water I then went home empty handed and will now use the internet ...............Leslie There are three B&Qs within driving distance. The unwatered plant phenomenon is common to all. With 6-packs selling for around £5-6, there must be close on £1000 worth of dead bedding plants in each. And the sheds say profits are falling. I do laugh when I see signs saying "everything in this rack half price". £3 for a lump of polystyrene and some crusty compost? When the local garden centre was owned by "Wyevale", death by drought was a surprisingly frequent occurrence. The new independent owners employ waterers morning and evening, outside opening times. What a difference. And they've installed some shaded canopies too! -- Cheers, Jake ======================================= Urgling from the East end of Swansea Bay where it's May and I'm worried about minus zero temperaturess forecast |
Desperate Times
On 07/05/2013 17:48, Jake wrote:
On Mon, 06 May 2013 15:45:10 +0100, Leslie wrote: B&Q - What a Shambles - I have had health problems once again and most of my plot and garden this year are well "poorly" Time then to venture to the garden centre where wheel chair access is good and you are able to borrow an electric cart The types of plants - shrubs - trees on offer were quite many and varied but! The vast majority of these specimens were dead or close to the great compost bin in the sky all to a lack of water I then went home empty handed and will now use the internet ...............Leslie There are three B&Qs within driving distance. The unwatered plant phenomenon is common to all. With 6-packs selling for around £5-6, there must be close on £1000 worth of dead bedding plants in each. And the sheds say profits are falling. I do laugh when I see signs saying "everything in this rack half price". £3 for a lump of polystyrene and some crusty compost? When the local garden centre was owned by "Wyevale", death by drought was a surprisingly frequent occurrence. The new independent owners employ waterers morning and evening, outside opening times. What a difference. And they've installed some shaded canopies too! When I took the wife to Warafrin clinic today I was talking to one of the nurses who said she had gone to the Swansea Wyevale GC yesterday and they were busy watering everything and everyone just after lunch, so it could be they are learning. |
Desperate Times
On Tue, 07 May 2013 20:34:38 +0100, David Hill
wrote: On 07/05/2013 17:48, Jake wrote: On Mon, 06 May 2013 15:45:10 +0100, Leslie wrote: B&Q - What a Shambles - I have had health problems once again and most of my plot and garden this year are well "poorly" Time then to venture to the garden centre where wheel chair access is good and you are able to borrow an electric cart The types of plants - shrubs - trees on offer were quite many and varied but! The vast majority of these specimens were dead or close to the great compost bin in the sky all to a lack of water I then went home empty handed and will now use the internet ...............Leslie There are three B&Qs within driving distance. The unwatered plant phenomenon is common to all. With 6-packs selling for around £5-6, there must be close on £1000 worth of dead bedding plants in each. And the sheds say profits are falling. I do laugh when I see signs saying "everything in this rack half price". £3 for a lump of polystyrene and some crusty compost? When the local garden centre was owned by "Wyevale", death by drought was a surprisingly frequent occurrence. The new independent owners employ waterers morning and evening, outside opening times. What a difference. And they've installed some shaded canopies too! When I took the wife to Warafrin clinic today I was talking to one of the nurses who said she had gone to the Swansea Wyevale GC yesterday and they were busy watering everything and everyone just after lunch, so it could be they are learning. Yeah! Watering in the high heat of the day. Forget the old-wives tales about leaf scorch, just accept that most of the moisture will evaporate before it does any good. We've just been through an extremely hot weekend. Plants in my greenhouses went unwatered from early Friday morning until yesterday evening when I could reduce to a single crutch without yelping. That's 4 hot days. But they're all ok. So drought death equates, I guess, to more than 4 days without water. -- Cheers, Jake ======================================= Urgling from the East end of Swansea Bay where it's May and I'm worried about minus zero temperaturess forecast |
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