Garden dimensions
Large Garden.
Small Garden Is there a parameter set to define size of garden? Mike -- British Pacific Fleet Reunion Birmingham September 17th - 20th H.M.S.Collingwood Assoc. Mini Reunion Weekend at Coventry Sept 24th - 27th Nat. Service (RAF) Assoc. AGM & Reunion Hayling Island 8th - 11th October www.nsrafa.com |
"Mike" wrote in message ... Large Garden. Small Garden Is there a parameter set to define size of garden? Mike "Can keep on top of the garden maintenace" = small garden "Garden escapes human control from time to time" = large garden :-) Neil |
Mike asked "..Is there a parameter set to define size of garden?.."
Its all relative If you had a garden of 5 acres and now have moved to half an acre then to you have a small garden, if however you had a 20ft by 6ft garden then a move to an eighths of an acre gives you a large garden. I once had 2 Ladies in at the same time asking for rockery plants, both said that their rockeries were "Quite large". When pressed one said hers was 6ft long and about 3 ft deep, the other was 60ft long and went from 5ft to 14 ft in depth. A small town garden will be a lot smaller than a small country garden. Size is in the eye of the beholder. -- David Hill Abacus nurseries www.abacus-nurseries.co.uk |
"David Hill" wrote in message
... Mike asked "..Is there a parameter set to define size of garden?.." snip Size is in the eye of the beholder. David Hill Abacus nurseries www.abacus-nurseries.co.uk and as I heard today; Beauty is in the eye of the beer holder |
On Fri, 3 Sep 2004 07:24:49 +0000 (UTC), "Mike" wrote:
Large Garden. Small Garden Is there a parameter set to define size of garden? I only know that when magazines and TV progs talk about "Small Gardens" they are almost always several times bigger than mine. Mine is 27 x 15 feet. (Front even smaller) Pam in Bristol |
Large Garden. Small Garden Is there a parameter set to define size of garden? I only know that when magazines and TV progs talk about "Small Gardens" they are almost always several times bigger than mine. Mine is 27 x 15 feet. (Front even smaller) Pam in Bristol Well this is what brought the subject of size up. Do for example Garden Planners, Seedmen, Garden Maintenance Companies, Nurseries etc, have a 'norm' which defines 'Small', 'Large'? I know when I was in business and a prospective customer telephoned me 'How much?', I had to ask lots of questions. If I ring a Travel Agent and ask him how much a Cruise will cost. How long, how many, where to?, but I have it in my mind, that somewhere, such as in your quote above, there is a Small/Large divide. Taking your size vs. mine, our is small 100 ft (depending on whether you count garage and parking space) x 20 ft. What would a TV Producer call it??????????? Mike |
"Mike" wrote in message
... Large Garden. Small Garden Is there a parameter set to define size of garden? I only know that when magazines and TV progs talk about "Small Gardens" they are almost always several times bigger than mine. Mine is 27 x 15 feet. (Front even smaller) Pam in Bristol Well this is what brought the subject of size up. Do for example Garden Planners, Seedmen, Garden Maintenance Companies, Nurseries etc, have a 'norm' which defines 'Small', 'Large'? I know when I was in business and a prospective customer telephoned me 'How much?', I had to ask lots of questions. If I ring a Travel Agent and ask him how much a Cruise will cost. How long, how many, where to?, but I have it in my mind, that somewhere, such as in your quote above, there is a Small/Large divide. Taking your size vs. mine, our is small 100 ft (depending on whether you count garage and parking space) x 20 ft. What would a TV Producer call it??????????? Mike As a designer I would have to say that your question is related to the in-quantifiable notion of space. As others have said, this measure of size is a matter of perception, location, existing content and intended usage. Designers worth their salt do not charge by the square meter (typically) but according to your project. If it is the selection of a 'Small Gardens' book, go to the library and borrow one to give it a dry run! Sorry, no help available! Neil |
On Fri, 3 Sep 2004 14:38:28 +0000 (UTC), "Mike" wrote:
What would a TV Producer call it??????????? A few years ago there was a Tv prog/series entitled "Trees for small gardens". I forget who presented it. I wrote and complained that NONE of those trees would be any good in my SMALL garden. Pam in Bristol |
"Troglodyte" wrote in message ... "Mike" wrote in message ... Large Garden. Small Garden Is there a parameter set to define size of garden? I only know that when magazines and TV progs talk about "Small Gardens" they are almost always several times bigger than mine. Mine is 27 x 15 feet. (Front even smaller) Pam in Bristol Well this is what brought the subject of size up. Do for example Garden Planners, Seedmen, Garden Maintenance Companies, Nurseries etc, have a 'norm' which defines 'Small', 'Large'? If your piece of string can mark out the perimeter, it's a small garden. If not, it's a large garden. Simple really. Steve ;--)) |
If your piece of string can mark out the perimeter, it's a small garden. If not, it's a large garden. Simple really. Steve ;--)) Ah!! But how long is a piece of string? A good Boy Scout always had a Shilling, a Pocket Knife, a Piece of String and a Handkerchief in his pocket, but my piece of string is much large for my pocket ;-} Mike |
if you can throw a stone and hit your boundary fence, you have a small
garden. if you require a steam catapult* to get the stone to hit the fence and a telescope to assess the damage, the garden is large. if you need substantial supplies of food and water when considering a walk round your garden, you are probably lost in scotland somewhere. *permission from your local constabulary might be required when using one of these. |
"Mike" wrote in message ... Large Garden. Small Garden Is there a parameter set to define size of garden? Small garden = what you've got. Large garden = what you want. -- Brian Sig: I have nothing to say |
On 3/9/04 21:57, in article , "Brian
Watson" wrote: "Mike" wrote in message ... Large Garden. Small Garden Is there a parameter set to define size of garden? Small garden = what you've got. Large garden = what you want. As to the latter - not necessarily. You cannot imagine how many customers tells us they have to reduce the size of their garden because they're now 60 or 65 - it's as if they think some switch goes off at that sort of age. My 71 yo husband simply looks at them in amazement as he prepares for another session of digging, weeding, planting! Yesterday, a customer rang and complained that Ray had sold her two Zauschnerias. He put his hand up for this 'crime'. The problem? They'd spread about 8" in each direction and she couldn't 'cope' with them. I'm not kidding - this is gospel truth. The old saying that there nowt so queer as folk is alive and kicking in the Nursery industry, I can tell you. The good news is that 99-999999% of the customers are just lovely! -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.co.uk South Devon (remove the weeds to email me) |
On Fri, 3 Sep 2004 20:03:59 +0100, "atwifa"
wrote: if you can throw a stone and hit your boundary fence, you have a small garden. If you can stand in one spot and water the whole garden with the nose, without moving (apart from turning that is!), then you have a small garden. Pam in Bristol |
"Mike" wrote in message ... If your piece of string can mark out the perimeter, it's a small garden. If not, it's a large garden. Simple really. Steve ;--)) Ah!! But how long is a piece of string? Equal to the periphery of a small garden, of course. A good Boy Scout always had a Shilling, a Pocket Knife, a Piece of String and a Handkerchief in his pocket, but my piece of string is much large for my pocket ;-} Franz |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:47 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter