Originally posted by veggiechicken
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I snuck in while your beak was otherwise engaged. Oh ell I’m reading a gardening book.........I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work. Thomas A. Edison
Outreach co-ordinator for the Gnome, Pixie and Fairy groups within the Nutters Club.
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Oi Rary are you implying me and my sister chicken can cause confusion?
I know naff all about gardening but am here to entertain.......why do you think I can’t grow beetroot.I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work. Thomas A. Edison
Outreach co-ordinator for the Gnome, Pixie and Fairy groups within the Nutters Club.
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Ive never seen a walking willy. Spotty and wrinkly yes but is a walking on especially bred for the British climate?Originally posted by veggiechicken View PostPoor Willy.
Is that why he walks peculiarly? 
Apologies for the tangent but I thought it would amuse rary
As you were..................
OK im off to find my enthusiasm........last seen running away with my diet plan.I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work. Thomas A. Edison
Outreach co-ordinator for the Gnome, Pixie and Fairy groups within the Nutters Club.
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Sorry about that Lumpy don't mean to imply anythingOriginally posted by Lumpy View PostOi Rary are you implying me and my sister chicken can cause confusion?
I know naff all about gardening but am here to entertain.......why do you think I can�t grow beetroot.
You and VC cause confusion on various threads
it may be a struggle to reach the top, but once your over the hill your problems start.
Member of the Nutters Club but I think I am just there to make up the numbers
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The remains of the old kitchen are under my garden. The neighbour probably has the same. When the terrace was first built in circa 1790 it was thatched and the kitchen was built across a yard for safety reasons. When the terrace was altered and added to in 1820 it was then tiled and a kitchen added to the main building leaving the original kitchen as an outhouse. This was pulled down in 1951, but they left the wall nearest the house as a dwarf wall and filled it with soil, however, having dug an exploratory hole a few years ago, I found the original flagged floor just over a metre down. We found the remains of the back wall whilst rotavating last summer.Originally posted by nickdub View PostI'm keeping my fingers crossed that your neighbors alluded to, survived whatever tumult caused their kitchen to become a subterranean feature of the garden :-)
I�m using the old bricks we dug up as borders to flower beds."I prefer rogues to imbeciles as they sometimes take a rest" (Alexander Dumas)
"It is neccessary to have wished for death in order to know how good it is to live" (also Alexandre Dumas)
Oxfordshire
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Best keep stum about it all in my opinion - if Time Team gets wind of this story you'll have whole herds of archeologists making holes in your veg patch :-)
Can't claim anything equivalent around me, though I've sometimes wondered if the track that goes down by my cottage and continues on by a stream in the valley, might not be a old pack route - if I knew anyone with a metal detector, I'd ask them to give it a recce.
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Doubt it, it’s neither old enough or interesting enough. However, when my ex and I moved into an old farmhouse, the previous residents weren’t interested in a garden and had put what had obviously once been garden and orchard down to grass. My husband promised to turn some of the land over for me so that I could have my garden. Whoops! He immediately hit something rather solid so he tried a bit further over with the same result. We discovered a Roman pavement. As we’d already had a visit from a historical researcher from Oxford University, we just tamped it all back down and put a load of topsoil on top so that I got my garden.Originally posted by nickdub View PostBest keep stum about it all in my opinion - if Time Team gets wind of this story you'll have whole herds of archeologists making holes in your veg patch :-)
Can't claim anything equivalent around me, though I've sometimes wondered if the track that goes down by my cottage and continues on by a stream in the valley, might not be a old pack route - if I knew anyone with a metal detector, I'd ask them to give it a recce."I prefer rogues to imbeciles as they sometimes take a rest" (Alexander Dumas)
"It is neccessary to have wished for death in order to know how good it is to live" (also Alexandre Dumas)
Oxfordshire
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We do start with a seed starting schedule and photos/drawings of what was where last year(s). Other than that records are retained in whats left of my brain.
We have a goal to grow organically and one half of the plot is dedicated to no dig as an experiment.
After that we make it up as we go and work at it when time/weather/circumstance allows. Now carol is part time we will keep abreast of things better. Nature is very tolerant of my meddling and usually fixes things in spite of my efforts.
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I keep a notebook (a moleskine as a present from my wife), that is small enough to go in my pocket. I generally try to write up what I did each visit to the plot/greenhouse. This tends to be what I've planted, what areas I've dug/weeded, progress of plants (good) and weeds (bad), also I'm noting the frosts this year. I keep a plan of what is planted where for rotation purposes too. When I'm travelling on the train, I'll often try to work out different rotations etc. There's also to-do lists, records of garden-centre trips, wildlife notes. It's not thematic, only chronological, but at the moment, it's easy to search (the longer I keep it up, the harder to find things it will be).
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I used to be quite meticulous in keeping records of what went in which bed, the variety of seeds used, when they were sown, what feed I used and how they did etc, but due to not being as mobile as I was I just sow or plant them when the weather improves (usually in mid-April) and, apart from rotating the onion family and potatoes, I just bung them in wherever there's room.I work very hard so please don't expect me to think as well!
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