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Old 22-09-2013, 04:12 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Home grown veg. are the best

In article , david@abacus-
nurseries.co.uk says...

So you are a troll then. Forget the leaf ID.

Janet



Wrong thread.


Nope; just another thread where the same gardenbanter poster is
trolling nonsense.

But I'll leave it to Meow to explain to Baz how to
"set things up right and you can just go out and pick each year "
potatoes, tomatoes, peas, broad beans and runner beans

unlike the rest of us who plant or sow those crops annually, fertilise
weed and water etc.

Janet.
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Old 23-09-2013, 11:12 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Home grown veg. are the best

Janet wrote in news:MPG.2ca919302b45f6ed989bb4
@news.individual.net:

In article , david@abacus-
nurseries.co.uk says...

So you are a troll then. Forget the leaf ID.

Janet



Wrong thread.


Nope; just another thread where the same gardenbanter poster is
trolling nonsense.

But I'll leave it to Meow to explain to Baz how to
"set things up right and you can just go out and pick each year "
potatoes, tomatoes, peas, broad beans and runner beans

unlike the rest of us who plant or sow those crops annually, fertilise
weed and water etc.

Janet.


Goodness me.
You have lost the plot now!!!!
You actually feel the need to fertilise and water weed? No typo excuse.

The only thing I need to be explained to about, is how the hell did you
manage to get on usenet!!!! With your absolute lack of your own perception?

Baz

ps:no need to reply
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Old 23-09-2013, 11:30 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Home grown veg. are the best

"Bob Hobden" wrote in
:


We now only grow the blight resistant tomatoes Ferline, Fantasio and
the new cherry type Losetto (amazing cropper no-one would need more
than two plants). They have only got blight in the last few weeks and
only today have I pulled them up because it does not go straight
throughout the plant like normal Toms so you still get a good crop.
Even better if you spray with Bordeaux mixture as then they don't get
blight at all. Peas, we use some old wire fencing we were given to
dump by a neighbour, four old metal posts banged in and run the
netting between, easy.


I like the look of Losetto. What do they taste like. Sweet? or of nothing,
as moneymakers do.
I think at the moment I am stuck on Gardeners Delight and Sweet Million.

Peas? Using plastic netting 4" type.
Not a huge crop this year, but bearable
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Old 23-09-2013, 11:48 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Home grown veg. are the best

In article ,
lid says...

On Sun, 22 Sep 2013 16:12:23 +0100, Janet wrote:


Nope; just another thread where the same gardenbanter poster is
trolling nonsense.

I'm interested in how you identify a Gardenbanter poster when that
poster used Google groups to post to this thread.


my mistake, sorry

Janet.




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Old 23-09-2013, 12:28 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Home grown veg. are the best

On 22/09/2013 13:26, Nick Maclaren wrote:
In article ,
Nick Maclaren wrote:

Also, I can't find a variety of climbing blue French bean that
doesn't some cropping at the first spell of cold or dry weather
in September. ...


Sigh. Doesn't STOP cropping.


Regards,
Nick Maclaren.

Have you tried making a later sowing?
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Old 23-09-2013, 12:40 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Home grown veg. are the best

Jake wrote in
:

On Mon, 23 Sep 2013 11:17:44 +0100, Janet wrote:



unlike the rest of us who plant or sow those crops annually,
fertilise weed and water etc.



Then you must be drunk again, because as all can see, that's not
what
I wrote .

Janet.


I think Baz was having a bit of fun at the absence of a comma between
"fertilise" and "weed" in your earlier post (which is what you did
write).


Yes, Jake.
A bit of fun with an insane person.
I think she could be a nice person with a bit of encoragement.

Btw I have not had any alcoholic drinks for 2 years.
And even when I did drink alcohol I have not ever ****ed off this janet
thing.

I know that I have been a pain in the past. I am sorting that now.


Baz
  #24   Report Post  
Old 23-09-2013, 12:50 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Home grown veg. are the best

In article , Baz wrote:

Also, I can't find a variety of climbing blue French bean that
doesn't some cropping at the first spell of cold or dry weather
in September. ...


Sigh. Doesn't STOP cropping.


OH! sigh. I bet it does stop! even as we speak!
I bet that there are NO new beans forming.

This sigh buisiness is abundant with people who think that they are a bit
brainy. Not in your case, you are brainy. You don't have to sigh.


I was sighing at my typo. "Some" was a word that I was going to use
in the next sentence! I do things like that ....


Regards,
Nick Maclaren.
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Old 23-09-2013, 12:52 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Home grown veg. are the best

On Mon, 23 Sep 2013 10:30:44 GMT, Baz wrote:

"Bob Hobden" wrote in
:


We now only grow the blight resistant tomatoes Ferline, Fantasio and
the new cherry type Losetto (amazing cropper no-one would need more
than two plants). They have only got blight in the last few weeks and
only today have I pulled them up because it does not go straight
throughout the plant like normal Toms so you still get a good crop.
Even better if you spray with Bordeaux mixture as then they don't get
blight at all. Peas, we use some old wire fencing we were given to
dump by a neighbour, four old metal posts banged in and run the
netting between, easy.


I like the look of Losetto. What do they taste like. Sweet? or of nothing,
as moneymakers do.


Sungold have been amazing this year. Was given the plants by a friend.
They are deliciously sweet, ripened early and we've had buckets of
them. They make a lovely yellow chutney too!

I think at the moment I am stuck on Gardeners Delight and Sweet Million.

Peas? Using plastic netting 4" type.
Not a huge crop this year, but bearable


--
http://www.voucherfreebies.co.uk


  #26   Report Post  
Old 23-09-2013, 12:56 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Home grown veg. are the best

In article ,
David Hill wrote:

Also, I can't find a variety of climbing blue French bean that
doesn't some cropping at the first spell of cold or dry weather
in September. ...


Sigh. Doesn't STOP cropping.

Have you tried making a later sowing?


Yes. I meant what I said that the stopping is weather-induced.
Planting them very late might help, but they probably wouldn't
grow enough to crop - they don't grow well in cold weather, either!


Regards,
Nick Maclaren.
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Old 24-09-2013, 09:13 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Home grown veg. are the best

On 23/09/2013 17:50, Baz wrote:

I am truly sorry for my vitrious words in the past.


Offered for assistance, absolutely not as criticism -
at a guess you meant something like vituperative? (Or vitreous
enamel/humour

--
regards
andy

  #28   Report Post  
Old 24-09-2013, 09:52 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Home grown veg. are the best

On 24/09/2013 09:36, Martin wrote:

I haven't smoked or chewed tobacco for 43 years.


Snuff or suppository?

--
regards
andy
  #29   Report Post  
Old 24-09-2013, 10:08 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Home grown veg. are the best

On 9/24/2013 9:13 AM, News wrote:
On 23/09/2013 17:50, Baz wrote:

I am truly sorry for my vitrious words in the past.


Offered for assistance, absolutely not as criticism -
at a guess you meant something like vituperative? (Or vitreous
enamel/humour

Or vitriolic?
  #30   Report Post  
Old 24-09-2013, 12:10 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Home grown veg. are the best

On 24/09/2013 11:18, Martin wrote:
On Tue, 24 Sep 2013 09:52:52 +0100, News
wrote:

On 24/09/2013 09:36, Martin wrote:

I haven't smoked or chewed tobacco for 43 years.


Snuff or suppository?


No thanks, your need is greater than mine.


Actually, as someone that has not been very good at stopping smoking
over the last 4 decades, I've settled on harm reduction. Since a year
last May, I've been using ecigarrettes of one form or another - and not
had a tobacco based cigarette since then.

I'm sure that no nicotine would be much better, but in terms of harm
reduction, its pretty much 98% of the way there.

Shame that the EU and UK are going to treat them as medical devices from
2015 - nearly as effective as banning them.

IMO, its a seriously backward step for harm reduction, and one that has,
surprise, surprise, been lobbied for by the tobacco and pharma industries.

That was the 30 second rant. I have more...

--
regards
andy
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