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#1
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a nice surprise
I have just found a baby oak tree in the garden, We have several large
trees, but no Oaks. It is about a foot tall and I realise I will have to move it but not yet maybe :-) kate |
#2
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a nice surprise
On 30/10/2011 15:41, Kate Morgan wrote:
I have just found a baby oak tree in the garden, We have several large trees, but no Oaks. It is about a foot tall and I realise I will have to move it but not yet maybe :-) kate I am forever pulling up ones up to about 6", I I left them I would have a oak sapling forest by now. -- Residing on low ground in North Staffordshire |
#3
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a nice surprise
"Kate Morgan" wrote I have just found a baby oak tree in the garden, We have several large trees, but no Oaks. It is about a foot tall and I realise I will have to move it but not yet maybe :-) Do you get jays in the garden? I've no oak tree but every spring we get several oak seedlings popping up. One or two have turned up in the hedge but others I've have to remove. Something brings the acorns in and the culprits are jays, I believe. This time of year I often see these birds poking around at the bottom end of the garden, busily planting their hoard. Squirrels seem to be more into eating or stashing away our hazelnuts before we have a chance to get any. -- Sue .. |
#4
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a nice surprise
"Sue" wrote in message o.uk... "Kate Morgan" wrote I have just found a baby oak tree in the garden, We have several large trees, but no Oaks. It is about a foot tall and I realise I will have to move it but not yet maybe :-) Do you get jays in the garden? I've no oak tree but every spring we get several oak seedlings popping up. One or two have turned up in the hedge but others I've have to remove. Something brings the acorns in and the culprits are jays, I believe. This time of year I often see these birds poking around at the bottom end of the garden, busily planting their hoard. Squirrels seem to be more into eating or stashing away our hazelnuts before we have a chance to get any. -- Sue . Sue do you a swap. One Oak tree for Six Bay Trees and as many Lilly of the Valley :-( as you like, but give me time to sort those out for transport, I lost last years :-(( Could also do a nice line in Holly as well. Not bad for a postage stamp garden ;-) Mike -- .................................... Don't take life too seriously, you'll never get out alive. .................................... |
#5
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a nice surprise
On 30/10/2011 15:41, Kate Morgan wrote:
I have just found a baby oak tree in the garden, We have several large trees, but no Oaks. It is about a foot tall and I realise I will have to move it but not yet maybe :-) kate That's great, Kate! We have quite a lot spring up in our garden and I keep as many as I can. If I were you, I'd lift and move this little tree before it gets too deeply rooted. Moved now, it will enjoy the warm soil and get its roots down over winter. Left for very long, it will be harder to lift and you may damage its roots. -- Spider from high ground in SE London gardening on clay |
#6
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a nice surprise
In article , Moonraker
writes I have just found a baby oak tree in the garden, We have several large trees, but no Oaks. It is about a foot tall and I realise I will have to move it but not yet maybe :-) kate I am forever pulling up ones up to about 6", I I left them I would have a oak sapling forest by now. I left one in my lawn not that many years ago, it's now about 25 foot high and growing! I just don't have the heart to cut it down though it will inevitably shadow part of the vegetable beds. -- Janet Tweedy Dalmatian Telegraph http://www.lancedal.demon.co.uk |
#7
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a nice surprise
On Mon, 31 Oct 2011 09:53:43 +0000, Janet Tweedy wrote:
In article , Moonraker writes I have just found a baby oak tree in the garden, We have several large trees, but no Oaks. It is about a foot tall and I realise I will have to move it but not yet maybe :-) kate I am forever pulling up ones up to about 6", I I left them I would have a oak sapling forest by now. I left one in my lawn not that many years ago, it's now about 25 foot high and growing! I just don't have the heart to cut it down though it will inevitably shadow part of the vegetable beds. Much higher and any council official doing a tree survey will say "Oh look an Oak, here have a tree protection order." Warwick |
#8
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a nice surprise
I have just found a baby oak tree in the garden, We have several large trees, but no Oaks. It is about a foot tall and I realise I will have to move it but not yet maybe :-) kate Do you have to move it? Space constrictions, perhaps? If so, do it when it's dormant but more importantly (perhaps) can you give it a site/cause that will have room for it? I would leave it but it is about 10ft. outside the kitchen window so there might be a problem in years to come :-) I am wandering about looking for somewhere it can grow. There are jays in the Forest Sue but we are right on the edge and they don't visit us very often :-( kate |
#9
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a nice surprise
In article , Warwick
writes Much higher and any council official doing a tree survey will say "Oh look an Oak, here have a tree protection order." They won't see it from the road -- Janet Tweedy Dalmatian Telegraph http://www.lancedal.demon.co.uk |
#10
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a nice surprise
On 30/10/2011 15:41, Kate Morgan wrote:
I have just found a baby oak tree in the garden, We have several large trees, but no Oaks. It is about a foot tall and I realise I will have to move it but not yet maybe :-) kate If it will be unsuitable for your garden, try contacting your local nature reserve/Forestry commission to see if they coul give it a good home before it becomes too big to move easily? Malcolm |
#11
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a nice surprise
On Mon, 31 Oct 2011 16:05:20 +0000, Malcolm wrote:
On 30/10/2011 15:41, Kate Morgan wrote: I have just found a baby oak tree in the garden, We have several large trees, but no Oaks. It is about a foot tall and I realise I will have to move it but not yet maybe :-) kate If it will be unsuitable for your garden, try contacting your local nature reserve/Forestry commission to see if they coul give it a good home before it becomes too big to move easily? Malcolm A few years ago my neighbour and I moved a small oak tree from his garden to a big grassed roundabout. It is now about 15 x 15 feet and looks really good. Steve -- Neural network software applications, help and support. Neural Network Software. www.npsl1.com EasyNN-plus. Neural Networks plus. www.easynn.com SwingNN. Forecast with Neural Networks. www.swingnn.com JustNN. Just Neural Networks. www.justnn.com |
#12
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a nice surprise
In article , Martin
writes and from a helicopter or even from Google Earth/Maps? Actually don't think so as it's next to next door's dying cherry tree and on this side is a large holly and a hazel so it's amongst a few . -- Janet Tweedy Dalmatian Telegraph http://www.lancedal.demon.co.uk |
#13
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a nice surprise
In article , Martin
writes I omitted the smiley. Oh that's a relief! I can't see Chiltern DC spending that much money on spying! -- Janet Tweedy Dalmatian Telegraph http://www.lancedal.demon.co.uk |
#14
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a nice surprise
"Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2011-11-02 11:39:27 +0000, Martin said: On Wed, 2 Nov 2011 11:12:16 +0000, Sacha wrote: On 2011-11-02 10:17:36 +0000, Martin said: On Tue, 1 Nov 2011 23:01:01 +0000, Sacha wrote: On 2011-11-01 22:44:42 +0000, Martin said: On Tue, 1 Nov 2011 11:49:47 +0000, Janet Tweedy wrote: In article , Martin writes I omitted the smiley. Oh that's a relief! I can't see Chiltern DC spending that much money on spying! There was a BBC TV programme this week, in which a guy living illegally in a national park in a well camouflaged reproduction Saxon hut was spotted from the air by a helicopter that was looking for illegally parked caravans. The sun reflected off the solar panels on his reproduction Saxon hut roof. It was in a repeat of an episode of Griff Rees Jones Mountains on BBC HD. At the time I wondered how they could afford to spend money for that on a helicopter. :-) You sound like my husband who, every time the tv does a 'surprise' arrival at someone's house or whatever, says "isn't it amazing that the camerman got inside first?" He's ruined many a moment of plot-unfolding anticipation for me! ;-) It might irritate my wife too, if she didn't usually beat me to saying it. :-) We think that just about every factual programme on TV is really fiction, especially the antique and house programmes. There's a degree of 'manipulation' in all of them but of course, if there wasn't, they'd be either dull or shambolic, or both! Some of the antique "experts" give the impression of being clueless when it comes to valuations and some of the auctions appear to be rigged. We both enjoy the Antiques Roadshow (though know of one person who burgled after appearing on it!) but I don't like the auction programmes. Too much faked up enthusiasm or disappointment for my liking! -- Sacha My sister's house was featured in the local paper's property section as 'The Property of the week' with all of the hype which goes with it. Then she got burgled within a few days. However, when my daughter and son in law had a huge luxury kitchen fitted and it was used as the companies 'Show Kitchen' in the brochure and advertising literature, they didn't say where it was or any location identification. :-)) Mike -- .................................... Don't take life too seriously, you'll never get out alive. .................................... Mike |
#15
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What a marvelous thing nature is!
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