WHAT ARE WE DOING IN THE GARDEN TODAY - 2022

Discussion in 'General Gardening Discussion' started by shiney, Jan 1, 2022.

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  1. Balc

    Balc Total Gardener

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    Your windfall apples remind me of the time I had an allotment & of the windfalls all around the field! I shared one with a friend from church & he had a big apple tree, a cooker, that some years produced so many apples we couldn't use them - or give them away! The same thing was happening to other plot holders as well! One particular tree was on a plot alongside ours & there was a small shed with a corrugated metal roof underneath it. When the apples started to ripen & fall off the tree you could hear the clanging sound on the shed roof!:biggrin::rolleyespink:
     
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    • NigelJ

      NigelJ Total Gardener

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      Did this and at the bottom of the hole was still very dry, despite recent rain and the soil being recently cultivated.
       
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      • Sheal

        Sheal Total Gardener

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        It stayed dry today although slightly damp. Front lawns have been mowed, the mower cleaned, and it's now in hibernation for the winter. :)
         
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        • shiney

          shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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          I've just put the cooked and cooled apple into 17 takeaway containers and frozen them. Thank you apple trees :blue thumb:
           
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          • Balc

            Balc Total Gardener

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            @shiney What are you going to do with so many containers of apple puree? By the time winter is over you will be sick of the sight of apple puree! :scratch::biggrin:
             
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            • shiney

              shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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              @Balc it is not puree but just cooked down sufficiently. It makes very good apple crumbles :blue thumb: One a week for 45 weeks, or when we have guests we use a lot more :). We sometimes mix it with other fruits in the freezer such as blackberries - all grown in the garden. :biggrin:
               
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              • Logan

                Logan Total Gardener

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                @Balc I've been rooting fuchsia cuttings in water a few years now, in compost they just rot. Get new growth cuttings about 5in, i change the water often. Then when i pot them up be careful not to damage the roots and as @pete said keep them wet for a few days and slowly get them dryer. Geranium cuttings i put in compost without rooting hormone, water them once and then leave them until rooted well.
                @pete can always use a fungicide spray for cuttings.
                 
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                • Logan

                  Logan Total Gardener

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                  Started cutting out the fruited canes of the loganberry plants.
                   
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                  • Logan

                    Logan Total Gardener

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                    This is what I've been doing
                    Wallflowers around the path just behind the polyanthus.
                    20221010_075707.jpg
                    This is a close up
                    20221010_075719.jpg
                    This border i widened a bit so that i could plant some foxgloves, not many wallflowers because of the spring bulbs.
                    20221010_075612.jpg
                    A cosmos that decided to flower late so i left it, the frost will get it next month anyway.
                    20221010_075644.jpg
                     
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                    • Balc

                      Balc Total Gardener

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                      It's similar to what I do as well! The Fuchsia cuttings in compost just dry out after a few days & after a week I have to throw them away. The ones that root in water die a couple of weeks after potting up even though they start out with lots of roots!

                      As for Geranium cuttings I rarely lose any. I never use rooting hormone at all & haven't done so since before I left home at 22 years old. In the 50 years since I've never used anything &, generally, I've had quite a bit of success at whatever I've tried to root! Just that the last few years I seem to have lost my "magical" touch! I can't see where I'm going wrong; I think I'm still doing what I've always done with plenty of success. I've never used fungicide spray on my cuttings - ever!
                       
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                      • Logan

                        Logan Total Gardener

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                        Perhaps you have to keep the fuchsia cuttings more moist for longer after potting them up,they don't mind being a bit wet, that's what i do.
                         
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                        • Balc

                          Balc Total Gardener

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                          .
                          Idem!
                           
                        • Balc

                          Balc Total Gardener

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                          This morning I spent about 1 1/2 hours on the balcony. I cut down a couple of pots with Dahlias in them. They have done very badly this year with no more than 3 or 4 flowers between them! I'm not keeping them for another year!

                          I also cut back hard a pot of Geraniums but didn't take any cuttings from them. Another pots with 3 Geraniums in it that were old & almost out of the compost I threw away, again without taking any cuttings.

                          I also emptied out 3 pots on the balcony floor that I wasn't sure was in them. Well one I did know what was supposed to have been in it, a lovely pink lily, but it had rotted away during the summer! :cry3:My son & daughter-in-law gave me it for my birthday 2 or 3 years ago. One of the other pots was completely empty! I have no idea what I had put in it! So I just put the compost back into the pot for now. I did the same with the lily pot. The 3rd pot had Hyacinths in it - well 3 small bulbs where there should have been at least 6! I took them out & put the compost back in the pot till I can decide what to do with them. The 3 pots were then shoved under the table in the corner of the balcony - out of sight, out of mind! :biggrin:

                          The 3 Hyacinth bulbs were then planted again but in a square tub that doesn't seem to have much else other than Grape Hyacinths in it!

                          I want to get some more Pansies or Violas this week & plant them in some of the pots. But I shall have to wait till I can get some to really see what I can do.

                          I then reorganized the pots that were left on the balcony floor & put them up against the balcony windows. I also put two pots of Fuchsia 'Beacon' in the same place. Unless we get a very hard winter like in 2009/10 they should resist the winter well. I have some fleece I can put over the if the weather gets really cold but practically nothing will survive if we have a very hard winter. Not even the Geraniums & Fuchsias that are in the mini-greenhouse in the most sheltered corner of the balcony, even though I have put it inside an old mattress bag that I have kept for a couple of years just for this purpose.
                           
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                          • Logan

                            Logan Total Gardener

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                            Not sure what I'm doing today, but a few days ago a fox dug up 2 wallflowers around the path. I had to plant the one, the other had hardly any roots left, so it's converlacing in some water. I know that it doesn't matter but i thought that i would give it a go. It might grow some more roots or might not. It's picked up from how it was.
                            20221013_090802.jpg
                             
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                            • Jocko

                              Jocko Guided by my better half.

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                              We actually went out in the garden this morning for a potter about. I had a hanging basket of Begonia Semperflorens which were lovely but had gone over. I cut it back and stuck it in the cold frame to see if they will overwinter. I will definitely be buying more of the same next season. "Organdy" is the variety and they grew in the shade outside my north-facing kitchen window.
                               
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