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Posted: Fri Jun 30, 2006 10:21 am
by Hillbilly
circlecross wrote:sorry to be a stick in the mud, but nursery regulations forbid the use of toilet rolls for craft. Kitchen rolls are fine. You can use them with your own precious darlings, but not other people's unfortunately (I get through more TP than KR, so they'll have to be plant pots instead!)

Susan
Yeah I was gonna say that - bloody silly if you ask me. Ho hum.

18. Use them as the 'beams' on a mobile. Thread string through them and then hang more rolls and eventually little cardboard shapes from cereal packets, apinted and glitterized.

I made a huge one. it was ace. :mrgreen:

Posted: Fri Jun 30, 2006 11:55 am
by Shirley
I raised the point about the toilet rolls at my son's primary school and they said they can use them but they have to microwave them for 15 seconds to zap any germs. :?

Posted: Fri Jun 30, 2006 8:19 pm
by circlecross
can't wait to see dh's face when he sees we're having toilet rolls for supper!

Posted: Fri Jul 14, 2006 1:17 pm
by cir3ngirl
My kids put them on their wrists and use as lazer zappers. The arty ones draw on buttons as well.

:flower: Davina

Posted: Mon Aug 14, 2006 12:49 pm
by Shirley
use them to help organise your plugs and wires etc... i've got a box full of wires that ends up as spaghetti... fold the wires, stuff into the toilet roll tube and write on what the wire is for.

Posted: Mon Sep 04, 2006 1:24 am
by bazil
fill with shredded paper mache newspaper to make fire logs(have to compress it well)

when i was little i used to make smoke boms with weed kiler suger and news paper(in wet solution) stuffed into toilet tubes(as paper mache ...then dried)...i dont any more but at the time they were awesom.....right out of the A team book of stuf and things

Posted: Mon Sep 04, 2006 8:59 am
by Chickpea
You want to watch it posting bomb-making instructions on the internet. Jack Bauer and the CTU will come and close down selfsufficientish.com and throw Andy and Dave into Guantanamo Bay and then where will we all be?

Posted: Mon Sep 04, 2006 9:20 am
by Han&Matt
I transplanted our leek seedlings into lengths of cardboard tubing (actually cut up tubing from inside black polythene roll, maybe a bit more robust than toilet rolls). Drop in seedling (after trimming roots and tops) and water to top (you have to push the roll into the earth a bit for sturdiness). The water blanches the leeks and earth settles the roots as water dies down.

Worked a treat, I have recently removed the tubes as the seedlings are maturing. Spent tubes went into compost.

Posted: Mon Sep 04, 2006 11:24 pm
by bazil
Chickpea wrote:You want to watch it posting bomb-making instructions on the internet. Jack Bauer and the CTU will come and close down selfsufficientish.com and throw Andy and Dave into Guantanamo Bay and then where will we all be?


sorry but i think CRW are currently dealing with real stuff + i was ten years old when i was playing with that stuff and its not really a omb more of a firework

and if dave and andy were in guantanamo....i would organise a small team of scotsmen.......and would make sure they would be eating kippers by the morning(or howeverlong it takes to cross the swamp!!)

Posted: Thu Sep 14, 2006 11:07 am
by busydaffodil
you line it with sand paper, and when your man is naughty............opps, wrong website! :wink:

For the record, I saw this on a Documentary....honest!

Posted: Sat Jun 23, 2007 10:34 am
by PaulDavidSumner
23. Put straight into your daleks without shredding or crushing first as suggested earlier, to create air pockets, give structure to the heap, and help prevent it becoming too compacted.

Posted: Sat Jun 23, 2007 3:07 pm
by UKBB
24. My Dad used to fill them with Plaster of Paris and allow to set. Once set he would peel away the cardboard and give the slug to his art class students to sculpt.

UKBB

Posted: Sun Jun 24, 2007 3:40 pm
by Thomzo
Going back to using them as plant pots, I tried it but they all sprouted mushrooms. Is it normal to have mushrooms sprouting from your toilet rolls?

Zoe

Posted: Mon Aug 20, 2007 11:02 pm
by blathanna
I use them every year to start off my peas and sweet peas. I put them in a seed tray so the soil does'nt fall out of the bottom.
I used them for my leeks last year but they were in the rolls for so ling they went mouldy. My peas and sweet peas are only in them for a few weeks. They are well suitable because the seet peas and peas have long roots.

Posted: Tue Aug 21, 2007 12:19 pm
by Thomzo
Hi Blathanna
I planted beans, radishes and lettuce into loo rolls for the first time this year and grew a bumper crop of......


Mushrooms :roll:

Cheers
Zoe