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| Me and my fiance are renting a house with a big garden. Most of the garden is a big, fertile looking lawn, and I want to turn some of it into flower and vegetable beds. One thing I'm worried about, is that there will be a big buildup of root eating pests in the old lawn, as I have heard it can be a problem. Is there a way to prevent them eating the heaps of tulips and other spring bulbs we have bought for the flower beds, and the potatoes and other root vegetables I'm hoping to be planting in the new kitchen garden in the spring. I'm hoping for some good advice for my garden ![]() You can see pictures of the house and garden on my blog, enjoy! http://missgreeen.blogspot.com/
__________________ Danish by birth, green by nature, Scottish by heart because of my darling and German by passion because of my Rottweiler puppy |
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| You could raise part of the garden up using raised beds, and fill them with compost. The only pest i really have a problem with is cats, and there is no way of preventing them!
__________________ Vegmonkey and the Mrs. - vegetable gardening in a small space in Cheltenham at www.vegmonkey.co.uk |
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| You tend to get wireworms in old grassland but as Sarzwix said, the sooner you get it turned over the better. My veg garden used to be lawn but I didn't have too much problem with pests (expcept pigeons - ongoing!) Lovely big lawn - and gorgeous orchids!
__________________ Earth laughs in flowers. Ralph Waldo Emerson www.vegheaven.blogspot.com Updated November 17th - The Big Dig |
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| You can bring Chafer grubs to the surface of a lawn by laying some black plastic over it overnight... pull off the plastic in the early morning for the birds to feast
__________________ ~ What do I think of Western civilisation? I think it would be a very good idea ~ Gandhi |
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| Thank you for the help, and the welcome. Our new house don't have internet yet, so it's hard to get online and reply:-) If i wait until spring to dig the beds(wich it seems I have to) how much bigger will the pest problems be? It's clay soil
__________________ Danish by birth, green by nature, Scottish by heart because of my darling and German by passion because of my Rottweiler puppy |
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| This last season, I extended my garden plot to take a few short rows of potatoes. I skimmed the turf off and turned the ground over, the following week I put in the potato seeds. I've had a good crop with no wire worm damage(or any other damage)at all. So sometimes it works and sometimes you have problems! The sooner you get some organic matter into the clay soil the better, even if its only to spread some manure over it for the winter and dig it in in spring. |
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| Hi Miss Green, Just wanted to say hi, lovely big garden you have there and great place to live. I have a customer in Odense and love coming to visit them. Good luck, Mandy
__________________ No mater when time you set out, you always get there at the same time |
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| Hi Mandy! I used to live in Odense, that's a wonderfull town. Now that I moved to the countryside I don't miss it a lot though. The one thing I missed when I lived there was a garden ![]()
__________________ Danish by birth, green by nature, Scottish by heart because of my darling and German by passion because of my Rottweiler puppy |
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