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#31
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Labelling
"jane" wrote in message ... On Sun, 4 Jul 2004 06:45:39 +0000 (UTC), "Franz Heymann" wrote: snip other quotes ~Which closes the circle: That is essentially why I am looking for an ~actual permament method. ~{:-) ~ ~To change the topic slightly, which urglers keep sketches of what is ~where in the garden as a backup for the labels? ~Who keeps them on a computer? Um. Me I photograph everything with the digicam. The allotment pics usually make it to my blog, and I've got plans for each plot on the PC so I can keep track of the rotations. I do that too. Different colours for the paths etc, and use the cells of an exel doc to keep track of the rows etc. But as to the labelling question, I bought a plant at an open garden and the label was a white plastic one which had been painted matt black, and the details scratched into the paint with a nail, giving white lettering on a black background. It looks really classy and professional. Steve |
#32
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Labelling
"Victoria Clare" wrote in message .206... Janet Baraclough.. wrote in : I use a thin but indestructible copper label (sold by Lakeland Plastics) indented by a biro. Anything else like seeds or cuttings gets a plastic label and pencil. I use copper labels for everything. If you turn the label over and give them a good hard rub with the rounded end of the biro, you can re-use it almost indefinitely. Also the copper annoys the slugs ;-) Some copper labels seem to use 'harder' copper than others: I like the squishier ones because they are easier to blank. Victoria -- gardening on a north-facing hill in South-East Cornwall -- ****** What's all the panic?. I use ordinary white thickish plastic labels and write on them with a Staedtler Permanent Lumocolour F or M ( fine or medium).felt-tipped pen. Five years of tests with different labels nailed to a sunny fence for my friend the local Stationery shopkeeper are still there and as good as when they were written. Some of my young pears and plum trees have the same plastic labels with the date 1988 printed on them and they are still well readable though stained quite a bit. They are tied on with thin plastic covered wire. I use B&Q thin covered wire , caged and wrapped inside a bobbin mounted on a stiff card. The tail end comes out of a hole in the front grille and is cut to length by a tin knife on the bottom of the card.. I sling it from my neck to chest height. I have about 45 clematis up my fences and walls, many roses, including climbers, passion flowers, one big wandering Blackberry fifteen feet either side of the stem.And that's just the north side adjoining the Neighbour thugs from Hell in the adjoining semi. Dotted along the fence also are ten-year old plums and a Greengage. Folks! - you just gotta mosey down that there garden centre and order one of these greengages called Dennistoun's Superb and are grafted on to Pixy rootstock. Mind you, - there's a wait of a year or six before they start fruiting. In the middle of the garden is my ham radio mast. . In the small plot at its foot are planted Wisteria Synopsis, and montana type clematis, - plus about five other clemati: several tea-roses and ramblers. Near that is a high pyracantha, pruned and sheared through the years to assume a flat diamond shape and stands transverse across the garden, half -way along. Alongside that is a high double boled (not 'poled') flowering cherry tree. All are clothed with clematis. Everything in my garden including the front are labelled. I get angry with myself when I can't immediately state what the plant's name is. I used to keep a book but the constant changes made a nonsense of it. Doug. ****** |
#33
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Labelling
"Douglas" wrote in message ... "Victoria Clare" wrote in message .206... Janet Baraclough.. wrote in : I use a thin but indestructible copper label (sold by Lakeland Plastics) indented by a biro. Anything else like seeds or cuttings gets a plastic label and pencil. I use copper labels for everything. If you turn the label over and give them a good hard rub with the rounded end of the biro, you can re-use it almost indefinitely. Also the copper annoys the slugs ;-) Some copper labels seem to use 'harder' copper than others: I like the squishier ones because they are easier to blank. Victoria -- gardening on a north-facing hill in South-East Cornwall -- ****** What's all the panic?. I use ordinary white thickish plastic labels and write on them with a Staedtler Permanent Lumocolour F or M ( fine or medium).felt-tipped pen. Five years of tests with different labels nailed to a sunny fence for my friend the local Stationery shopkeeper are still there and as good as when they were written. Some of my young pears and plum trees have the same plastic labels with the date 1988 printed on them and they are still well readable though stained quite a bit. They are tied on with thin plastic covered wire. I use B&Q thin covered wire , caged and wrapped inside a bobbin mounted on a stiff card. The tail end comes out of a hole in the front grille and is cut to length by a tin knife on the bottom of the card.. I sling it from my neck to chest height. I have about 45 clematis up my fences and walls, many roses, including climbers, passion flowers, one big wandering Blackberry fifteen feet either side of the stem.And that's just the north side adjoining the Neighbour thugs from Hell in the adjoining semi. Dotted along the fence also are ten-year old plums and a Greengage. Folks! - you just gotta mosey down that there garden centre and order one of these greengages called Dennistoun's Superb and are grafted on to Pixy rootstock. Mind you, - there's a wait of a year or six before they start fruiting. In the middle of the garden is my ham radio mast. . In the small plot at its foot are planted *Wisteria Synopsis, and montana type clematis, - plus about five other clemati: several tea-roses and ramblers. Near that is a high pyracantha, pruned and sheared through the years to assume a flat diamond shape and stands transverse across the garden, half -way along. Alongside that is a high double boled (not 'poled') flowering cherry tree. All are clothed with clematis. Everything in my garden including the front are labelled. I get angry with myself when I can't immediately state what the plant's name is. I used to keep a book but the constant changes made a nonsense of it. Doug. ****** *"Wisteria Synopsis?" - how silly!, - but it wasn't me as done it guv! - it wuz this 'yer Spell-checker, 'onest!. Wisteria Synensis Doug. ****** |
#34
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Labelling
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#35
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Labelling
On Sun, 4 Jul 2004 06:45:39 +0000 (UTC), "Franz Heymann"
wrote: "Kay" wrote in message ... In article , Janet Baraclough. . writes LOL. For anything I hope will be a permanent fixture, like azaleas or clematis, I use a thin but indestructible copper label (sold by Lakeland Plastics) indented by a biro. Anything else like seeds or cuttings gets a plastic label and pencil. Pencil lasts far longer than "indelible" marker pens ime. However, I'm so mean and idle I use each plastic label four times (both sides, both ends) before cleaning them off with a brillo pad and starting again. I find spit and a firm rub with a finger works perfectly well. Which closes the circle: That is essentially why I am looking for an actual permament method. {:-) To change the topic slightly, which urglers keep sketches of what is where in the garden as a backup for the labels? Who keeps them on a computer? We've taken to systematically photographing the whole garden several times a year. We keep the images on the computer. -- Martin |
#36
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Labelling
On Fri, 09 Jul 2004 18:59:33 GMT, Frogleg wrote:
~On Mon, 5 Jul 2004 08:19:16 +0000 (UTC), (jane) wrote: ~ ~On Sun, 4 Jul 2004 06:45:39 +0000 (UTC), "Franz Heymann" wrote: ~ ~~To change the topic slightly, which urglers keep sketches of what is ~~where in the garden as a backup for the labels? ~~Who keeps them on a computer? ~ ~Um. Me ~I photograph everything with the digicam. The allotment pics usually ~make it to my blog, and I've got plans for each plot on the PC so I ~can keep track of the rotations. ~ ~URL? http://www.moonbells.com/ I'm a couple of weeks behind... not been up much recently for one reason or another, but thankfully Him Upstairs has been doing the watering for me -- jane Don't part with your illusions. When they are gone, you may still exist but you have ceased to live. Mark Twain Please remove onmaps from replies, thanks! |
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