Friday, 9 November 2007

JOBS TO DO IN AUTUMN


Winter is setting in. The coalbunker is full and the mower is parked up for a while as the grass is now too wet to cut. If you are storing your mower in the shed it is a good idea to smear moving parts in grease and get the WD40 out for a spray over everything else. All to often people go back to their tools in spring to find them seized up. Fill a bucket with sand and put in some old oil. This can be used to dip your manual tools into before storage. Let us have a look at what else we can be getting on with to keep warm outside.


JOBS TO DO THIS WEEK


BRASSICAS

Check your brassicas for pests. Just because it is cold doesn’t mean that greenfly are not active. Our broccoli is still disappearing fast, as they munch away. Put a net over them if pigeons are around too.

ROSES
Roses will need a prune now to prevent wind rock. Just reduce the bushes to half their size and leave like that until early spring, and then you can cut them back harder.

FALLEN LEAVES
Fallen leaves can mean food for earthworms and make brilliant mulch around shrubs and trees. Of course they can also be a real irritation when they cover paths, ponds, lawns and drainpipes. Collect what you can and put them into the compost bin. If you don’t have a compost bin, put them into a dustbin liner bag with a pint or two of water and leave until summer. You will have then have a great bulking agent for your flowerpots.

FEED THE BIRDS

Birds that stay with us for the winter will benefit by having their feeders topped up.

WINTER BEDDING
It’s not too late to plant out the winter bedding. Try wallflowers, and forget- me- nots, primulas, violas, daisies and anything else that is looking good in the garden centres.

HERBACEOUS PERENNIALS
When you are in the garden centre have a look for good herbaceous perennials. Now is a good time to add these to the garden, as the soil is still warm(ish) but moister then it was in summer.


Horticultural.

Thursday, 8 November 2007

FROCKSROCK




Are you stuck what to buy a girl between the ages of 3to 8?

Well fear not. Local ladies Angelo Callaghan and Nicki Cole have come up with a solution.

Frocksrock.

These innovatine gifts combine fashion for girls and their dolls.

Based and designed in Ireland.

Check out the website:




Derry City Press release



Wednesday, 7 November 2007

A STROLL IN THE GARDEN - THERESA CROSSAN






Theresa Crossan from Buncrana is a very keen gardener. This year her hard work has been rewarded. Theresa received first prize for the Best Garden in the Swilly Gardening Club competition. Because of careful planning and wind protection the garden looks fantastic at any time of year.


How long have you been working on the garden?
I have been in this house for twenty-seven years and tending to the garden for twenty-five years. I started it from scratch. It has been a gradual process with a lot of changes.

Why is the rear garden in two sections?
I tried to grow tender plants but they just got totally ruined with the wind from the Swilly. The bottom end of the garden is now a windbreak, divided by a large Escallonia hedge. I have planted olearia and senicio as well, as these plants are ideal for the coast. These give us the protection we need to grow tender annuals.


What is your favourite plant?
I really like the hedging plants. We tried leylandii when the garden was young but all but two of them died in the wind. My favourite hedging that we have is the griselinia littoralis with its apple coloured leaves.

What is your favourite feature in the garden?
The water feature is very relaxing. I enjoy its soothing properties.

What is your favourite season and why?
I am at my most enthusiastic in the time just coming into summer.

What work gives you the most pleasure in the garden?
It certainly isn’t the weeding! I have put plants very close together in my garden to stop the weeds coming up. My greatest pleasure is planting up the summer bedding.

Any irritations in the garden. How do you cope?
My children used to be the biggest problem with their footballs. The only problem I have now is our dog; he has a tendency to make a nest in the foliage.

What is your best gardening tool?
The hoe to keep the small weeds down, before they become a nuisance.

Top Tip for spring?
Use the hoe regularly especially early on in the season.
.
Any plans for the future?
I add bits every year and next year I would like white climbing roses to grow over the trellis feature.




Horticultural.






MORE CORK IMAGES







CORK IMAGES







HALLOWEEN PICTURE

2-3rd class at Scoil Colmcille Newtowncunningham

Other stories

Related Posts with Thumbnails