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#16
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Hot and cold composting
In article ,
Jeff Layman wrote: On 20/11/2020 07:15, Chris Hogg wrote: Peeing on your compost heap was recommended here several times a few years ago. Given that it has been SOP for millennia, and I remember it being recommended here within a year or two of this newsgroup being started, that's playing it down! I do wonder, being male, of a certain age, and with the compost heap being some distance from the house, whether such an activity will become physiologically "de rigueur" in the future. :-) Mine is c. 4' high and I am no longer, er, up to it :-( Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#17
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Hot and cold composting
On 20/11/2020 15:06, Nick Maclaren wrote:
In article , Jeff Layman wrote: On 20/11/2020 07:15, Chris Hogg wrote: Peeing on your compost heap was recommended here several times a few years ago. Given that it has been SOP for millennia, and I remember it being recommended here within a year or two of this newsgroup being started, that's playing it down! I do wonder, being male, of a certain age, and with the compost heap being some distance from the house, whether such an activity will become physiologically "de rigueur" in the future. :-) Mine is c. 4' high and I am no longer, er, up to it :-( Regards, Nick Maclaren. Mine is the size of a container. Shipping container, and I am only halfway through cutting back 20 year old yews, and hornbeams and another bloody great tree has fallen over...and the new woodshed is full already... ....But I have been impressed with the bedroom wood-burning stove's ability to chew through very small branches and generate tropical conditions. -- "Nature does not give up the winter because people dislike the cold." ― Confucius |
#18
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Hot and cold composting
On Sat, 21 Nov 2020 03:11:49 The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 20/11/2020 15:06, Nick Maclaren wrote: In article , Jeff Layman wrote: On 20/11/2020 07:15, Chris Hogg wrote: Peeing on your compost heap was recommended here several times a few years ago. Given that it has been SOP for millennia, and I remember it being recommended here within a year or two of this newsgroup being started, that's playing it down! I do wonder, being male, of a certain age, and with the compost heap being some distance from the house, whether such an activity will become physiologically "de rigueur" in the future. :-) Mine is c. 4' high and I am no longer, er, up to it :-( Regards, Nick Maclaren. Mine is the size of a container. Shipping container, and I am only halfway through cutting back 20 year old yews, and hornbeams and another bloody great tree has fallen over...and the new woodshed is full already... For the last two years I have been lowering my hornbeam hedge in France to about three feet as I no longer want to totter on a stepladder to keep it in order. I haven't been able to visit France at all this year and my son-in-law, who visited recently to check on the house, sent a photo back which showed that it has grown as high as ever! I wouldn't have planted hornbeam but when there was a remembrement some thirty years ago, I was given the hornbeam free by the local authority. David -- David Rance writing from Caversham, Reading, UK |
#19
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Hot and cold composting
On 21/11/2020 09:33, David Rance wrote:
On Sat, 21 Nov 2020 03:11:49 The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 20/11/2020 15:06, Nick Maclaren wrote: In article , Jeff LaymanÂ* wrote: On 20/11/2020 07:15, Chris Hogg wrote: Peeing on your compost heap was recommended here several times a few years ago. Â*Given that it has been SOP for millennia, and I remember it being recommended here within a year or two of this newsgroup being started, that's playing it down! I do wonder, being male, of a certain age, and with the compost heap being some distance from the house, whether such an activity will become physiologically "de rigueur" in the future. :-) Â*Mine is c. 4' high and I am no longer, er, up to it :-( Â* Regards, Nick Maclaren. Mine is the size of a container. Shipping container, and I am only halfway through cutting back 20 year old yews, and hornbeams and another bloody great tree has fallen over...and the new woodshed is full already... For the last two years I have been lowering my hornbeam hedge in France to about three feet as I no longer want to totter on a stepladder to keep it in order. I haven't been able to visit France at all this year and my son-in-law, who visited recently to check on the house, sent a photo back which showed that it has grown as high as ever! I wouldn't have planted hornbeam but when there was a remembrement some thirty years ago, I was given the hornbeam free by the local authority. David I love it - only thing on super wet clay - but it has to be kept in its place. -- Renewable energy: Expensive solutions that don't work to a problem that doesn't exist instituted by self legalising protection rackets that don't protect, masquerading as public servants who don't serve the public. |
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