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Prickly matter
Hi,
I am now thinking about our new garden, having moved in the autumn and I have 2 pricky problems. The first is that there is an awful lot of brambles in the garden (The previous owner was an elderly ladty and I think it was getting abit much for her). If I was to try to bag them up to take away as waste the bags would just rip to shreds and I was thinking of chopping them into managable lengths and getting an incinerator bin to burn them, Other than obvious things like not upsetting the neighbours by lighting up when they have washing out etc, can anyone foresee any big problems? For instance will they not burn? If I do burn them up, will ashes be any good to mix in with the compost bin, or am I just being daft? My seconf problem is a holly tree, about 6 foot tall which is just where I dont want it. I would like it in the front garden but am concerned about the practicalities of diggin it up and moving it (we have a garage is can be carried though) withou getting our hands, arms and faces scratched to pieces. Any suggestions. Sam |
#2
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Prickly matter
wrote in message ... Hi, My seconf problem is a holly tree, about 6 foot tall which is just where I dont want it. I would like it in the front garden but am concerned about the practicalities of diggin it up and moving it (we have a garage is can be carried though) withou getting our hands, arms and faces scratched to pieces. Any suggestions. holly is notorious for not liking to be transplanted - it put down a deep tap root which you break on digging out. pk |
#3
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Prickly matter
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#4
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Prickly matter
Thanks Paul (and Janet too).
Looks like I may have to decide whether to lose that holly then or rethink my plans. At least I have time to decide - we are having some building work done, so there'll be no major garden overhaul until that's finished, so it'll probably be this time next year. Sam On Tue, 11 Mar 2003 23:56:21 +0000 (UTC), "Paul Kelly" wrote: wrote in message ... Hi, My seconf problem is a holly tree, about 6 foot tall which is just where I dont want it. I would like it in the front garden but am concerned about the practicalities of diggin it up and moving it (we have a garage is can be carried though) withou getting our hands, arms and faces scratched to pieces. Any suggestions. holly is notorious for not liking to be transplanted - it put down a deep tap root which you break on digging out. pk |
#5
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Prickly matter
wrote in message
... Thanks Paul (and Janet too). Looks like I may have to decide whether to lose that holly then or rethink my plans. At least I have time to decide - we are having some building work done, so there'll be no major garden overhaul until that's finished, so it'll probably be this time next year. Sam On Tue, 11 Mar 2003 23:56:21 +0000 (UTC), "Paul Kelly" wrote: wrote in message ... Hi, My seconf problem is a holly tree, about 6 foot tall which is just where I dont want it. I would like it in the front garden but am concerned about the practicalities of diggin it up and moving it (we have a garage is can be carried though) withou getting our hands, arms and faces scratched to pieces. Any suggestions. holly is notorious for not liking to be transplanted - it put down a deep tap root which you break on digging out. pk You could of course always turn the Holy into a nice if somehwat large standard, just cut back all the lower leaves and form a nice roudned ball on top !!! Duncan |
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