

Have a great weekend all.
Not all men are like this. For me insecticide is rhubarb leaves boiled uo and anything that encourages ladyburds etc and fertilizer is from next doors sheep with an added bouquet of nettles for variety.grubbysoles wrote:I think it's a man thing - they see any kind of weed killer/fertilizer/miracle-gro, etc, as another power tool!! My DH cut the grass and threw an enormous tub of some kind of lawn feed on it to make it go greener. I promptly forgot that he had done it and let the chickens out the next day. I think they ate the whole lot! Luckily it seems to have only been a mixture of minerals and nothing chemical-y and they have come to no harm. A very expensive tub of chicken food!
Yes, I was waiting to get my knuckles rapped for that!bodrighy wrote:Not all men are like this.
grubbysoles wrote:Yes, I was waiting to get my knuckles rapped for that!bodrighy wrote:Not all men are like this.
befuddle him with the grid planting method. The best things are onions or beetroot. As you should have your onions in by now use beetroot. Plant a good couple of fingers worth of beetroot seeds in a square inch of ground and see what happens.Peggy Sue wrote:Love the theory big Al![]()
I wouldn't say my OH is a typical man (like hoovering for a start!) but he does desperately want to do teh traditional stuff- striaght lines when sewing, weedkiller, fertiliser, excessive digging to imress neighbours etc
We ahve had an ongoing big problem with bindweed invading one corner of the allotment, it strangled the raspberries there last year so I decided this year I would as a one off use Glyphosphate as it came up (ie now) for this and this purpose only, very carefully on the leaves of the bind weed only for this one year. It's my only compromise from organic so far on teh allotment. So now he's just HAS to spray the couple of dandelions on the path outside the house- they can be pulled up easily enough but now there's a power killer available![]()
As for straight lines I just can't convince him that they will still grow OK...