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#1
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Curious Again
Is the pit style greenhouse in use in England?.........H
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#2
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On Thu, 9 Jun 2005 13:41:55 -0400, "Harold Walker"
wrote: Is the pit style greenhouse in use in England?.........H Do you mean that you dig a pit, plant in the bottom, then cover the top with polythene? I did that one year on my allotment, ages ago, haviing read it in a book. It can't have been very successful, as I didn't do it again. Trouble is, digging a pit on my allotment is difficult as there are great slabs of limestone as little as a foot down in some places. 'twould depend on the water table too! Pam in Bristol |
#3
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"Pam Moore" wrote in message ... On Thu, 9 Jun 2005 13:41:55 -0400, "Harold Walker" wrote: Is the pit style greenhouse in use in England?.........H Do you mean that you dig a pit, plant in the bottom, then cover the top with polythene? I did that one year on my allotment, ages ago, haviing read it in a book. It can't have been very successful, as I didn't do it again. Trouble is, digging a pit on my allotment is difficult as there are great slabs of limestone as little as a foot down in some places. 'twould depend on the water table too! Pam in Bristol If you have the patience to read I will give a fairly brief description of the total "system".. a pit 8 feet X 12 feet and five feet deep.....at each corner stacked up concrete blocks and filled with concrete...these were to hold 2inch x 8inch pressure treated timber for the base of the greenhouse....the blocks were connected with 2 x 6 wall plates and the greenhouse built on top of that....the north wall was built out of 2 x 4's and boarded in solid with insulation between the 2 x 4's(16 inch on centre).the north wall was 4 feet above ground.......the northerly roof section was about 4 feet with double glazed 8mm poly material(2x4's 16 inch on centre)....from the peak the front of the greenhouse dropped down at an angle favorable to the winter sun for maxim heat.....again the glazing was double 8mm polycarbon....both ends constructed with same mateerials....window openers on the north roof and at both ends were auto operated....total height of the greenhouse from max height to floor was 9 feet.....at the rear side and inside the greenhouse made a 300 gallon tank (not a waste of space as I grew potted seedlings there)..the 300 gallon tank was my heat sink....at the top of the greenhouse was a four inch plastic pipe with holes in it...one end of the pipe was lead into the water tank which was then connected to a copper pipe in the tank...at the output end was a fan....the fan pulled the upper air in the greenhouse down thru the tank to warm up the water and from there back into the greenhouse.....at night time the warmish air from the tank gave me a frost free greenhouse even in the dead of winter....even when the outside temperature dropped down to minus 17 degree C the greenhouse remained frost free.....the tank gained its heat not only from the upper air but also from the earth as at a depth of 5 feet the soil remains at a fairly constant temperature well above the freeze level....in my particular case the water table was of no problem...at the wettest of times it was about 15 feet below the surface level...when I had a well drilled to cut down on the water bill they had to do down 20 feet for a good supply.....hope this is understandable..........if I was to do another one I would locate the water tank right down the middle of the greenhouse with a board on top to walk on.......H |
#4
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The message
from "Harold Walker" contains these words: Is the pit style greenhouse in use in England?.........H Mine was - GRP sections, bottom flaps buried, three beds separated by two boarded trenches as walkways. -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
#5
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On Thu, 9 Jun 2005 14:29:37 -0400, "Harold Walker"
wrote: If you have the patience to read I will give a fairly brief description You never do things by halves, do you Harry! That's a bit beyond me. 5 feet deep? I'd have a pond! Pam in Bristol |
#6
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"Harold Walker" wrote ... Is the pit style greenhouse in use in England?.........H If I remember correctly in the greenhouses at West Dean Gardens, West Sussex you walk down steps as you enter them as you did in the stove house at Wyld Court Orchids, Nr. Newbury. (many years ago, sadly it's no longer there) -- Regards Bob In Runnymede, 17 miles West of London |
#7
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"Pam Moore" wrote in message ... On Thu, 9 Jun 2005 14:29:37 -0400, "Harold Walker" wrote: If you have the patience to read I will give a fairly brief description You never do things by halves, do you Harry! That's a bit beyond me. 5 feet deep? I'd have a pond! Pam in Bristol Usually do my best...if a job is worth doing it is worth doing well...that is what poppa taught me many years ago...the greenhouse is still in operating condition but with new "personel"....no longer has the 300 gallon water tank but still uses the overhead pipe with holes in it to circulate the hot air down below....... H |
#8
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The message
from Pam Moore contains these words: On Thu, 9 Jun 2005 14:29:37 -0400, "Harold Walker" wrote: If you have the patience to read I will give a fairly brief description You never do things by halves, do you Harry! That's a bit beyond me. 5 feet deep? I'd have a pond! When it rains here, I'd have a pond if it were five inches deep. On the smallholding, where the greenhouse was, I only had to wear wellies if it had been raining for a long time. -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
#9
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The message
from Janet Baraclough contains these words: The message from "Harold Walker" contains these words: Is the pit style greenhouse in use in England?.........H Not any more, but there are some historic examples which have been restored to full working order. Two I know of are at Heligan in Cornwall (a pineapple house iirc) and Ascog Fernery, on the isle of Bute in Scotland, which is, er, a fernery :-) Both are well worth a visit if you get chance. You've forgotten the Eden Project... -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
#10
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"Jaques d'Alltrades" wrote in message k... The message from Pam Moore contains these words: On Thu, 9 Jun 2005 14:29:37 -0400, "Harold Walker" wrote: If you have the patience to read I will give a fairly brief description You never do things by halves, do you Harry! That's a bit beyond me. 5 feet deep? I'd have a pond! When it rains here, I'd have a pond if it were five inches deep. On the smallholding, where the greenhouse was, I only had to wear wellies if it had been raining for a long time. -- Rusty And on my little old plot it can rain for days and days on end and not even a puddle would be seen so I could go down at least 15 feet for a real deep one....would get tired of walking up and down the steps tho.....h |
#11
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The message
from "Harold Walker" contains these words: When it rains here, I'd have a pond if it were five inches deep. On the smallholding, where the greenhouse was, I only had to wear wellies if it had been raining for a long time. And on my little old plot it can rain for days and days on end and not even a puddle would be seen so I could go down at least 15 feet for a real deep one....would get tired of walking up and down the steps tho.....h Fit a lift - or do I mean elevator? -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
#12
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"Jaques d'Alltrades" wrote in message k... The message from "Harold Walker" contains these words: When it rains here, I'd have a pond if it were five inches deep. On the smallholding, where the greenhouse was, I only had to wear wellies if it had been raining for a long time. And on my little old plot it can rain for days and days on end and not even a puddle would be seen so I could go down at least 15 feet for a real deep one....would get tired of walking up and down the steps tho.....h Fit a lift - or do I mean elevator?.or perhaps an escalator 'old boy' -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
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