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#1
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Berry bearing small shrub
Suggestions, please, for a shrub (whose berries will be left for birds to eat), for a very small, shaded garden (not mine) in the Midlands. It has heavy clay soil, waterlogged in winter (yes, it's a nightmare!). Thank you. -- Andy Mabbett Say "NO!" to compulsory ID Cards: http://www.no2id.net/ |
#2
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Say "NO!" to compulsory ID Cards: http://www.no2id.net/ Why? We had them in WWII and did no harm. |
#3
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Mike wrote:
::: Say "NO!" to compulsory ID Cards: http://www.no2id.net/ :: :: Why? :: :: We had them in WWII and did no harm. 1) In 1949 they didn't have the technology to reproduce them as easily as these will be reproduced, making them utterly useless - if they are not total, IE 100% of people using them, they are a waste of time at combatting the crimes they are deigned to curtail. 2) Can you trust this government to get it right? - can you trust them not to waste billions of pounds every year for maybe a decade upon something that will fall by the wayside like the CSA, Millenium Dome and umpteen other white elephants? -- http://www.blueyonder256k.myby.co.uk/ |
#4
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"Andy Mabbett" wrote in message ... Suggestions, please, for a shrub (whose berries will be left for birds to eat), for a very small, shaded garden (not mine) in the Midlands. It has heavy clay soil, waterlogged in winter (yes, it's a nightmare!). Thank you. -- Andy Mabbett The only thing I can think of that meets the criteria is cotoneaster horizontalis. Most of my garden is shaded as I have a lot of mature trees, and the soil is heavy clay. It gets very sticky in the winter although I wouldn't called it waterlogged. C.H. survives here. Has red berries which the blackbirds have now eaten up completely. HTH Tina |
#5
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Andy Mabbett muttered:
Suggestions, please, for a shrub (whose berries will be left for birds to eat), for a very small, shaded garden (not mine) in the Midlands. It has heavy clay soil, waterlogged in winter (yes, it's a nightmare!). Thank you. There must be hundreds of hawthorn varieties that would do the trick it also does well on clay soil. Monty Don was musing about topiary hawthorn the other week... |
#6
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Phil L wrote:
Mike wrote: Say "NO!" to compulsory ID Cards: http://www.no2id.net/ Why? We had them in WWII and did no harm. 1) In 1949 they didn't have the technology to reproduce them as easily as these will be reproduced, making them utterly useless - if they are not total, IE 100% of people using them, they are a waste of time at combatting the crimes they are deigned to curtail. Agreed: it'll just introduce a whole new crime of mugging people just to get their ID cards to drop at the scene of the bombing. 2) Can you trust this government to get it right? - can you trust them not to waste billions of pounds every year for maybe a decade upon something that will fall by the wayside like the CSA, Millenium Dome and umpteen other white elephants? No, I don't; but let's not forget that the CSA and the Damn Dome were among the menagerie of white elephants they inherited from the other lot. Mike. |
#7
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On Mon, 7 Mar 2005 23:22:13 -0000, "Christina Websell"
wrote: "Andy Mabbett" wrote in message ... Suggestions, please, for a shrub (whose berries will be left for birds to eat), for a very small, shaded garden (not mine) in the Midlands. It has heavy clay soil, waterlogged in winter (yes, it's a nightmare!). The only thing I can think of that meets the criteria is cotoneaster horizontalis. Most of my garden is shaded as I have a lot of mature trees, and the soil is heavy clay. It gets very sticky in the winter although I wouldn't called it waterlogged. C.H. survives here. Has red berries which the blackbirds have now eaten up completely. Pyracantha perhaps? It seems fairly indestructible and our soil is pretty heavy and definitely wet (not just in winter). -- Stephen Poley uk.rec.birdwatching FAQ: http://www.xs4all.nl/~sbpoley/ukrb.htm |
#8
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Stephen Poley wrote:
On Mon, 7 Mar 2005 23:22:13 -0000, "Christina Websell" wrote: "Andy Mabbett" wrote in message Big Snip Pyracantha perhaps? It seems fairly indestructible and our soil is pretty heavy and definitely wet (not just in winter). Howzabout a native plant. Such as Blackthorn or Hawthorn ? Baith hae braw birdyberries, and, can be severly cut back to encourage growth. Windy |
#9
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Quote:
Cotoneaster horizontalis is good because it gives late spring flowers , lots of berries , fantastic autumn colour and ,a feature often overlooked , puts its new leaves out very early in the growing season . am i the only one who has noticed how horribly skeletal and bare those Hibiscus look nearly all through spring? oh and C horizontalis can of course cover vertical areas with little or no support needed. |
#10
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On Wed, 9 Mar 2005 21:07:30 +0000 (UTC), Windy wrote:
Stephen Poley wrote: On Mon, 7 Mar 2005 23:22:13 -0000, "Christina Websell" wrote: "Andy Mabbett" wrote in message Big Snip Pyracantha perhaps? It seems fairly indestructible and our soil is pretty heavy and definitely wet (not just in winter). Howzabout a native plant. Such as Blackthorn or Hawthorn ? Baith hae braw birdyberries, and, can be severly cut back to encourage growth. The hawthorns we tried didn't survive. I suspect they may not be keen on very wet ground - but I could be wrong, and maybe our problem was something completely different. Some have survived around here. -- Stephen Poley uk.rec.birdwatching FAQ: http://www.xs4all.nl/~sbpoley/ukrb.htm |
#11
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"Stephen Poley" wrote in message ... On Wed, 9 Mar 2005 21:07:30 +0000 (UTC), Windy wrote: Stephen Poley wrote: On Mon, 7 Mar 2005 23:22:13 -0000, "Christina Websell" wrote: "Andy Mabbett" wrote in message Big Snip Pyracantha perhaps? It seems fairly indestructible and our soil is pretty heavy and definitely wet (not just in winter). Howzabout a native plant. Such as Blackthorn or Hawthorn ? Baith hae braw birdyberries, and, can be severly cut back to encourage growth. The hawthorns we tried didn't survive. I suspect they may not be keen on very wet ground - but I could be wrong, and maybe our problem was something completely different. Some have survived around here. -- The hawthorns here are spectacular, grown into trees and always covered with berries.. The pyracanthus gave up the ghost, I tried several times with it. Tina |
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