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#16
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On 08/01/09 12:26, Alan Johnson wrote:
Sacha wrote: -6C here last night and a white start to the day. It was about -20°C here in northern Germany two nights ago. The lowest temperature was recorded about 50 miles away at -28°C (Bad Lippspringe). It was only about -15°C last night. I haven't seen the good side of freezing point for over a week. It rarely climbs above -10°C during the day. My leeks look dead. I'm just glad the price of heating oil has fallen. We've just ordered 4000 litres for around £2000. In the spring 3000 litres cost us around £3000. Regards But this is exactly what we need. Deep, deep cold for weeks and weeks. If you have dug your soil over in November and left in in clods , then it will break down beautifully in the Spring when you start to till it. Also , the deep frozen ground will kill loads of slugs (so, they tell me) |
#17
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On 08/01/09 12:26, Alan Johnson wrote:
Sacha wrote: -6C here last night and a white start to the day. It was about -20°C here in northern Germany two nights ago. The lowest temperature was recorded about 50 miles away at -28°C (Bad Lippspringe). It was only about -15°C last night. I haven't seen the good side of freezing point for over a week. It rarely climbs above -10°C during the day. My leeks look dead. I'm just glad the price of heating oil has fallen. We've just ordered 4000 litres for around £2000. In the spring 3000 litres cost us around £3000. Regards But this is exactly what we need. Deep, deep cold for weeks and weeks. If you have dug your soil over in November and left in in clods , then it will break down beautifully in the Spring when you start to till it. Also , the deep frozen ground will kill loads of slugs (so, they tell me) |
#18
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On 08/01/09 12:26, Alan Johnson wrote:
Sacha wrote: -6C here last night and a white start to the day. It was about -20°C here in northern Germany two nights ago. The lowest temperature was recorded about 50 miles away at -28°C (Bad Lippspringe). It was only about -15°C last night. I haven't seen the good side of freezing point for over a week. It rarely climbs above -10°C during the day. My leeks look dead. I'm just glad the price of heating oil has fallen. We've just ordered 4000 litres for around £2000. In the spring 3000 litres cost us around £3000. Regards But this is exactly what we need. Deep, deep cold for weeks and weeks. If you have dug your soil over in November and left in in clods , then it will break down beautifully in the Spring when you start to till it. Also , the deep frozen ground will kill loads of slugs (so, they tell me) |
#19
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Sacha wrote:
On 8/1/09 12:26, in article , "Alan Johnson" wrote: Sacha wrote: -6C here last night and a white start to the day. snip The birds are eating us out of house and home and to our real pleasure, the long-tailed tits are back. We saw them for the first time ever last year and then they disappeared. But today they're back on the peanut feeder, vying for space with the blue tits. We also have a lot of birds in the garden, although I'm sorry to say I'm not very good at identifying them yet. We put lots of food out for them in this weather. Of those that I do recognise we have blue tits and great tits, greenfinches, sparrows, robins, thrushes and blackbirds. Last week I saw a hawfinch (had to look that and the greenfinches up in my bird book). The crows and magpies appear to have returned since last week and I was also surprised to see our regular summer and autumn visitor, the woodpecker. I'm not sure what woodpecker it is: it's grey and black with a red head, or red markings around the head. There seem to be several that look vaguely similar. Hope you'll warm up soon, Alan - let us know how it goes. Reading your post reminds me of why that huge Camellia at Pilnitz near Dresden, has its own greenhouse on wheels for the winter! I think you get colder where you are, don't you? Yes. On the whole, I describe the climate as similar to the UK, but the extremes do tend to be more pronounced. Winters have been milder over recent years but -10°C to -15°C isn't really unusual. And a warm summer is 30°C but over the (many) years I have now lived in Germany I have seen 40°C+ a number of times. Last night was around -15°C. Regards -- Alan Johnson, Geotr@ns www.geotrans-online.de German-English, Geosciences/Technical http://geotransblog.blogspot.com/ Terminus Est |
#20
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Ed wrote:
But this is exactly what we need. Deep, deep cold for weeks and weeks. If you have dug your soil over in November and left in in clods , then it will break down beautifully in the Spring when you start to till it. I don't deny it's what we may need. In fact, I'm releived that we are finally getting a really cold winter again. Unfortunately, I didn't get a great deal of digging done last year. We bought the house and moved in at the end of March. The house, with large garden, had previously been rented for 10 years and neither the tenants nor, apparently, the landlord, cared much for gardening. Which borders on the criminal with a 1600m² garden (that's a sixth of a hectare). So we spent a large part of the summer and autumn filling 5 or 6 skips with rubble and assorted garden waste. We've still got a bit of each left. The 'lawn' was a foot long, there were trees sprouting up everywhere (everything from a quarter of an inch to 5-6 inches thick). We discovered many, many yards of pathways after clearing away moss and grass. We cleared away a couple of tree stumps where somebody had cut down trees about a foot above the ground and then just left the stumps in place, planting ivy around them to cover them up. We felled about a dozen other trees, including four enormous fir trees, one with a diameter of about three feet. Etc. So no, we didn't do much digging. :-) That'll start in earnest this year. Also , the deep frozen ground will kill loads of slugs (so, they tell me) . That's why I'm releived that we are getting a really cold winter. It puts paid to alsorts of nasty beasties, especially that particular pest in German forests, the bark beetle. A hard winter like this also tends to reduce the mosquito plague in the summer. I hope it stays frozen for a few more weeks yet despite the problems. Nah, I think it's time for thaw now. Don't like this excessive cold. In the meantime, wear woolly hats and gloves and thermal vests and pants. Don't let your body get cold if you are working outdoors! At these temperatures, I ain't working out of doors, believe me. Regards -- Alan Johnson, Geotr@ns www.geotrans-online.de German-English, Geosciences/Technical http://geotransblog.blogspot.com/ Terminus Est |
#21
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In message , Alan Johnson
writes Sacha wrote: On 8/1/09 12:26, in article , "Alan Johnson" wrote: Sacha wrote: -6C here last night and a white start to the day. snip The birds are eating us out of house and home and to our real pleasure, the long-tailed tits are back. We saw them for the first time ever last year and then they disappeared. But today they're back on the peanut feeder, vying for space with the blue tits. We also have a lot of birds in the garden, although I'm sorry to say I'm not very good at identifying them yet. We put lots of food out for them in this weather. Of those that I do recognise we have blue tits and great tits, greenfinches, sparrows, robins, thrushes and blackbirds. Last week I saw a hawfinch (had to look that and the greenfinches up in my bird book). The crows and magpies appear to have returned since last week and I was also surprised to see our regular summer and autumn visitor, the woodpecker. I'm not sure what woodpecker it is: it's grey and black with a red head, or red markings around the head. There seem to be several that look vaguely similar. snip You seem to have a good variety of birds. Put out nyjer seed and you will probably get the stars of the finches - the goldfinch & siskin.- although I'd love to be able to attract bullfinches to our garden. We see them occasionally but they're spectacularly shy. Your woodpecker is almost certainly a Great Spotted Woodpecker. In Germany you normally have 4 woodpeckers - Green, Great Spotted, Lesser Spotted and Black .... we don't get the Black in the UK. You are very fortunate to have the Hawfinch - relatively rare here. They usually travel in small groups prefering tall deciduous trees like beech and oak (and cherries; they crack to stones with their massive beaks). They also appear in old yew trees - about a dozen or so caused quite a commotion when they visited the churchyard in our small Dorset village a year or so ago. They stayed about 2 months in the old yews and then disappeared. We had a fair amount of twitchers coming to tick them off their list. -- Gopher .... I know my place! |
#22
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Gopher wrote:
You seem to have a good variety of birds. Put out nyjer seed and you will probably get the stars of the finches - the goldfinch & siskin.- although I'd love to be able to attract bullfinches to our garden. We see them occasionally but they're spectacularly shy. Your woodpecker is almost certainly a Great Spotted Woodpecker. In Germany you normally have 4 woodpeckers - Green, Great Spotted, Lesser Spotted and Black .... we don't get the Black in the UK. You are very fortunate to have the Hawfinch - relatively rare here. They usually travel in small groups prefering tall deciduous trees like beech and oak (and cherries; they crack to stones with their massive beaks). They also appear in old yew trees - about a dozen or so caused quite a commotion when they visited the churchyard in our small Dorset village a year or so ago. They stayed about 2 months in the old yews and then disappeared. We had a fair amount of twitchers coming to tick them off their list. Gopher, In the summer we have even more bird varieties. I'll have to seriously try and identify more of them. I've only seen the Hawfinch once ot twice before. It was that big beak that gave it away. We chopped down a number of trees but we have a lot of hazel in our garden and the neighbour's - that's what seems to attract the woodpecker. We also have a cherry tree, but I don't think that's what attracted the Hawfinch last week... :-) You're right, though, it'll be a Great Spotted Woodpecker. Thanks and regards -- Alan Johnson, Geotr@ns www.geotrans-online.de German-English, Geosciences/Technical http://geotransblog.blogspot.com/ Terminus Est |
#23
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In message , Alan Johnson
writes Gopher wrote: You seem to have a good variety of birds. Put out nyjer seed and you will probably get the stars of the finches - the goldfinch & siskin.- although I'd love to be able to attract bullfinches to our garden. We see them occasionally but they're spectacularly shy. Your woodpecker is almost certainly a Great Spotted Woodpecker. In Germany you normally have 4 woodpeckers - Green, Great Spotted, Lesser Spotted and Black .... we don't get the Black in the UK. You are very fortunate to have the Hawfinch - relatively rare here. They usually travel in small groups prefering tall deciduous trees like beech and oak (and cherries; they crack to stones with their massive beaks). They also appear in old yew trees - about a dozen or so caused quite a commotion when they visited the churchyard in our small Dorset village a year or so ago. They stayed about 2 months in the old yews had a fair amount of twitchers coming to tick them off their list. Gopher, In the summer we have even more bird varieties. I'll have to seriously try and identify more of them. I've only seen the Hawfinch once ot twice before. It was that big beak that gave it away. We chopped down a number of trees but we have a lot of hazel in our garden and the neighbour's - that's what seems to attract the woodpecker. We also have a cherry tree, but I don't think that's what attracted the Hawfinch last week... :-) You're right, though, it'll be a Great Spotted Woodpecker. Thanks and regards I lived for quite a time in Germany too attending University in Würzburg and then lived on in Bavaria for a time. All quite some time ago but I recall being enthralled watching Bluethroats (Blaukehlchen) under one of the bridges outside the town centre. Loads of birding opportunities in Germany. Brgds. -- Gopher .... I know my place! |
#24
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On 9/1/09 17:50, in article ,
"VivienB" wrote: On Thu, 08 Jan 2009 20:26:32 +0000, Ed ex@directory wrote: Also , the deep frozen ground will kill loads of slugs (so, they tell me) . I hope Vine Weevils and Lily Beetles will also be much reduced in numbers - they have been building up around here, helped by the mild winters we have had the last few years. The gnats were out today......... -- Sacha http://www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon (new website online) |
#26
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On 9/1/09 22:40, in article ,
"Martin" wrote: On Fri, 09 Jan 2009 22:32:58 +0000, Sacha wrote: On 9/1/09 22:21, in article , "Martin" wrote: On Fri, 09 Jan 2009 22:19:11 +0000, Sacha wrote: On 9/1/09 17:50, in article , "VivienB" wrote: On Thu, 08 Jan 2009 20:26:32 +0000, Ed ex@directory wrote: Also , the deep frozen ground will kill loads of slugs (so, they tell me) . I hope Vine Weevils and Lily Beetles will also be much reduced in numbers - they have been building up around here, helped by the mild winters we have had the last few years. The gnats were out today......... in the Heineken brewery they are out 24/7 ![]() When we get free beer on the garden paths I'll be sure to tell you! In the meantime, what has that to do with gnats in uk gardens? What am I not picking up on? That much of the stuff sold as premium lager in UK is extracted from gnats. Duh! So sorry - very slow of me! -- Sacha http://www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon (new website online) |
#27
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In message , Martin
writes On Fri, 09 Jan 2009 22:19:11 +0000, Sacha wrote: On 9/1/09 17:50, in article , "VivienB" wrote: On Thu, 08 Jan 2009 20:26:32 +0000, Ed ex@directory wrote: Also , the deep frozen ground will kill loads of slugs (so, they tell me) . I hope Vine Weevils and Lily Beetles will also be much reduced in numbers - they have been building up around here, helped by the mild winters we have had the last few years. The gnats were out today......... in the Heineken brewery they are out 24/7 ![]() LOL! -- Gordon H Remove "invalid" to reply |
#28
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On 9/1/09 22:45, in article ,
"Martin" wrote: On Fri, 09 Jan 2009 22:43:44 +0000, Sacha wrote: On 9/1/09 22:40, in article , "Martin" wrote: On Fri, 09 Jan 2009 22:32:58 +0000, Sacha wrote: On 9/1/09 22:21, in article , "Martin" wrote: On Fri, 09 Jan 2009 22:19:11 +0000, Sacha wrote: On 9/1/09 17:50, in article , "VivienB" wrote: On Thu, 08 Jan 2009 20:26:32 +0000, Ed ex@directory wrote: Also , the deep frozen ground will kill loads of slugs (so, they tell me) . I hope Vine Weevils and Lily Beetles will also be much reduced in numbers - they have been building up around here, helped by the mild winters we have had the last few years. The gnats were out today......... in the Heineken brewery they are out 24/7 ![]() When we get free beer on the garden paths I'll be sure to tell you! In the meantime, what has that to do with gnats in uk gardens? What am I not picking up on? That much of the stuff sold as premium lager in UK is extracted from gnats. Duh! So sorry - very slow of me! ![]() I put it down to being more a Cristal type, myself. ;-)) -- Sacha http://www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon (new website online) |
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