Free Heating Mats

Discussion in 'Freebies, Offers & Bargains' started by marina29, Jan 8, 2020.

  1. shiney

    shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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    Same goes for me. I'd rather someone who hasn't got heating of any sort to gain from it. :dbgrtmb:
     
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    • Moley

      Moley Super Gardener

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      I'm definitely interested if this is still open.
       
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      • WeeTam

        WeeTam Total Gardener

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        • Mike Allen

          Mike Allen Total Gardener

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          I fear that perhaps my earlier post in this thread may have been a litlle misunderstood. Most likely, I had typed out all the words, but they and the letters came out in the wrong places.:rolleyespink: Anyway. Lets say, I have used propagators in the past.

          In my own GH, when growing fuchsias from cuttings. I usde the whole stage/bench on one side of the GH. Even when I was using propane gas to heat the house, I built this propagator. So it was about twelve feet long by 30" Very much like a cold frame bought inside. It had a sloping top of glass. Soil warming cable with Humex soil thermostat. The around the inside of the frame, I used another heating cable for air heating. Gas heating became too costly, so back to an unheated GH. The dimensions of the propagator enabled me to harden off seedlings as well as standing more advanced pots.

          I make mention of this hardening off for a reason. So our gardening friend may not even have a GH, so a heated tray on a windowsill. Wowee! tiny green seedling eventually appear. Now is a very critical time. Very little is written about this stage. Do I now take the seedlings out of the propagator. This is my own practice. I leave well alone until the second pair of leaves appear. Then I will gently prick out and usin a cell tray, as it were, pot up. Here the above heating cable comes into it's own.

          Sadly our friend, pricks out and stands her new 'babies' on the windowsill. Come nightfall, temperatures drop and, 'baby' whatever feels the cold. At this juncture, in my lectures/talks. I illustrate. So here I lie in bed. Suddenly it turns cold. I bend and cuddle into myself to conserve warmth. Poor little seedling does likewise but is unable to eventually unwrap and stretch out.

          So pricking out is perhaps a problem time. At this stage, I found my propagator to fit the bill. So, so sorry friends for ramberling on. Put it down to 'me age'. Yes, go on using propagators. Make the best of your hobby.

          Question. When the experts run out of advice. What then?????????

          They begin to take note of what others say.
           
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          • ARMANDII

            ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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            Well, taking the advice of the "Book" experts as being Gospel is not always the good thing anyway, Mike, as we all know that Mother Nature and Plants don't read books or watch TV.:dunno: We Gardeners learn more by our mistakes and successes, using common sense, listening to people who's practical experience is known, personally, to be respected.
            We all have different experiences of gardening, different methods of growing most plants, different likes/passions of of plants that can affect the way we treat plants, different micro climates, etc. But all those experiences, opinions, mistakes, successes, over time, don't make us Experts but they do make us experienced. I've never heard of any of the GC Gang claiming to be an "expert" but who do quietly use their gardening experiences to advise people. So perhaps when the "experts run out of advice".......which, I have to say, I've never known them to, then we turn to the experienced gardeners who, on GC, are always willing to pass on their good advice to other members:dunno::heehee:
             
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            • pete

              pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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              One thing I quickly noticed when I started growing plants in the early 70s was that when reading books written by "experts" I was amazed how many just appeared to the quoting exactly the same things regarding growing conditions and compost etc. for various plants.

              They, "the experts" were just following the generally accepted line and not many were writing from their own experiences, and when I started to try just a few experiments of my own I was quite amazed at the time how wrong they were on occasions.

              Main ones being on hardiness, in those days it was mostly, it will survive out doors or it wont, no thought of micro climates or even location.

              Things have moved on.:)
               
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              • shiney

                shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                I always quote Mrs Shiney's answer when someone saw our Camellias in full bloom and said "You have alkaline soil so you shouldn't be growing acid soil loving plants".

                She said, "You've got it wrong, if you don't tell them they're not supposed to grow beautifully in our soil then they don't know it. All our plants do well because I tell them they love it here!"
                 
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                • pete

                  pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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                  If you dont try you dont find out, having said that there are some things that just wont work/happen, but its nice to try, and the more knowledge you accumulate the more the interest grows.
                   
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                  • andrews

                    andrews Super Gardener

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                    I have an issue with experts. They tend to have an arrogance and will tell you how great they are, rather than help.

                    I'm a recently converted enthusiast who has learnt through trial and error. We've had failures, we've had successes where the plant shouldn't survive. We've planted stuff that has taken over and wont plant again (in this environment).

                    I treat every day as a school day
                     
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                    • Upsydaisy

                      Upsydaisy Total Gardener

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                      On that note....one of my baby Cleome died and the other two look dodgy.:cry3: I'm good on errors!!:heehee:
                       
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                      • shiney

                        shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                        Horse radish planted in the veg plot :yikes: :doh: It took 15 years to get rid of it!!! :sad:

                        I replanted it all along the grass verge by the field along the road. We and the neighbours now have a steady source of supply. :heehee:
                         
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                        • ARMANDII

                          ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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                          In the early years, many Moons ago, I used to keep strimming a Weed in the garden, only to get a slap on the back of my head from my Wife who told me it was a very small, young Willow that she'd planted.:doh:
                          The road to reasonable success, personally, is littered with dead plants because of taking "Experts" advice. Clematis was always, in the early years, a problem plant due to sticking to advice from the book. In the end, I threw the rules away, and now have over 60 Clematis growing happily very closely together on either side of my Trellis entrance to the garden. I use heating mats (kindly donated by InkBird) while also using Heated Propagatars and I find they can be a boon.:love30::thumbsup:
                           
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                          • j towers

                            j towers Apprentice Gardener

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                            I would have loved to take you up on your offer, but I'm still trying to get the hubby to install the electrics in the greenhouse. one day I will have power :lunapic 130165696578242 5:
                             
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                            • Cuttings

                              Cuttings Super Gardener

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                              Cleome can be gits to grow, if your baby Cleome dont survive, let me know, its a plant I grow every year, and I will send you some (at no cost). I could send you 1 plug each of the 3 colours.
                               
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                              • Loofah

                                Loofah Admin Staff Member

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                                Not even sure if anything happened with the original offer...?
                                 
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