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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#41
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On 6/22/2018 6:41 PM, Jim K wrote:
Martin Brown Wrote in message: Holly, ivy and buttercups seem to shrug it off too. Keep at them they will succumb ;-) A drop of washing-up liquid will help. Those leaves have a waxy surface, the detergent helps the glyphosate to make contact with the leaf surface. |
#42
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Martin Brown Wrote in message:
On 21/06/2018 18:37, ARW wrote: On 21/06/2018 18:12, Scott wrote: It's a mutual garden where no-one shows much enthusiasm for gardening. Using weedkiller is DIY gardening. Just dropped 25 litres of the stuff on the roots of a tree in a neighbours garden. What a waste! Glyphosate is rapidly adsorbed by clay in soil and has to hit green plant material to cause any significant damage. Unless being used to thin trees where it is applied to cuts in the bark not the leaves. Holly, ivy and buttercups seem to shrug it off too. Keep at them they will succumb ;-) -- -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#43
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On 22/06/2018 16:31, Jim K wrote:
Scott Wrote in message: On Fri, 22 Jun 2018 11:05:34 +0100, pamela wrote: On 10:14 22 Jun 2018, Scott wrote: On Fri, 22 Jun 2018 06:41:56 +0100, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 21/06/18 22:21, Andrew Gabriel wrote: Really, you all need to get together and decide what you want to do with the garden, and who does which bits of the work. Reminds me of a dovoce lawyer. "What you need to do is sit down and negortiate a settlement" "If It had ever been possible to sit down and negotiate a settlement there would be no divorce...." Indeed ... I could write a book about it. Three absentee landlords. One owner unfit to carry out gardening. One nervous about going into the rear garden on her own. One hardly ever seen and listens to music on headphones. One hates gardening. Person on the ground floor can't stand the person on the first floor. Person on the second floor supports the person on the first floor. Person on the second floor thinks everyone is incompetent. I tend to agree with that viewpoint. Nearly everyone pleads shortage of money. One seems to view maintenance as a bourgois conspiracy. We have roof repairs outstanding but no agreement to carry out the work. I have sent a 'project fear' letter pointing out that any future damage is highly unlikely to be met by insurers. I do not want to open a second front on gardening. My aim is a 'cheap and cheerful' fix without consent to make the rear garden more presentable and to preserve the opportunity to sell without having to explain the state of the garden. To that end I plan to obliterate the weeds and plant some form of robust ground cover plants. This is a 'metre margin'. The grass can stay where it is. Reminds me of a conveyancing lawyer: "At least in a divorce the parties want an end-point. With a neighbour dispute parties are more determined and there is less incentive to settle. These disputes are usually only resolved when one party moves." Agreeing on how to deal with a shared garden is a nightmare. There sometimes seems to be more opinions than parties involved. Surely there is an obligation on the parties to pay costs incurred by their representative or by the management company? Yes, but we are 'self-factored' meaning the building is managed by the residents, who at the last meeting split 4-4 on the vote. This was for roof repairs where some thought the first bidder was too cheap and others thought the second bidder was too expensive. We therefore did not have the five votes needed for a decision. Put your own quote in & sub it to the cheapest. Pure class -- Adam |
#44
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ARW Wrote in message:
On 22/06/2018 16:31, Jim K wrote: Scott Wrote in message: On Fri, 22 Jun 2018 11:05:34 +0100, pamela wrote: On 10:14 22 Jun 2018, Scott wrote: On Fri, 22 Jun 2018 06:41:56 +0100, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 21/06/18 22:21, Andrew Gabriel wrote: Really, you all need to get together and decide what you want to do with the garden, and who does which bits of the work. Reminds me of a dovoce lawyer. "What you need to do is sit down and negortiate a settlement" "If It had ever been possible to sit down and negotiate a settlement there would be no divorce...." Indeed ... I could write a book about it. Three absentee landlords. One owner unfit to carry out gardening. One nervous about going into the rear garden on her own. One hardly ever seen and listens to music on headphones. One hates gardening. Person on the ground floor can't stand the person on the first floor. Person on the second floor supports the person on the first floor. Person on the second floor thinks everyone is incompetent. I tend to agree with that viewpoint. Nearly everyone pleads shortage of money. One seems to view maintenance as a bourgois conspiracy. We have roof repairs outstanding but no agreement to carry out the work. I have sent a 'project fear' letter pointing out that any future damage is highly unlikely to be met by insurers. I do not want to open a second front on gardening. My aim is a 'cheap and cheerful' fix without consent to make the rear garden more presentable and to preserve the opportunity to sell without having to explain the state of the garden. To that end I plan to obliterate the weeds and plant some form of robust ground cover plants. This is a 'metre margin'. The grass can stay where it is. Reminds me of a conveyancing lawyer: "At least in a divorce the parties want an end-point. With a neighbour dispute parties are more determined and there is less incentive to settle. These disputes are usually only resolved when one party moves." Agreeing on how to deal with a shared garden is a nightmare. There sometimes seems to be more opinions than parties involved. Surely there is an obligation on the parties to pay costs incurred by their representative or by the management company? Yes, but we are 'self-factored' meaning the building is managed by the residents, who at the last meeting split 4-4 on the vote. This was for roof repairs where some thought the first bidder was too cheap and others thought the second bidder was too expensive. We therefore did not have the five votes needed for a decision. Put your own quote in & sub it to the cheapest. Pure class ;-) :-D -- -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#45
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Tim Watts Wrote in message:
On 22/06/18 16:16, Harry Bloomfield wrote: Scott pretended : It's a mutual garden where no-one shows much enthusiasm for gardening. You could always write a rude word in the grass, with weed killer. Best done when all are in bed. Back to glyphosate. Takes a while to "develop" ![]() Some distant friends were getting peed off with a local helicopterist so they laughed heartily when some wag drew in glyphosate an enormous cock & balls on the field of grass that was the copters "final approach"... I think they should also underplant with various seasonal bulbs & maybe a spray of appropriately placed snowdrops.. -- -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#46
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S Viemeister Wrote in message:
On 6/22/2018 6:41 PM, Jim K wrote: Martin Brown Wrote in message: Holly, ivy and buttercups seem to shrug it off too. Keep at them they will succumb ;-) A drop of washing-up liquid will help. Those leaves have a waxy surface, the detergent helps the glyphosate to make contact with the leaf surface. I thought most brands had the evil adjuvants & surfactants already in but I will have a trial next time. -- -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#47
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Mark wrote:
Andrew Mawson wrote: "ARW" wrote in message ... On 21/06/2018 18:12, Scott wrote: It's a mutual garden where no-one shows much enthusiasm for gardening. Using weedkiller is DIY gardening. Just dropped 25 litres of the stuff on the roots of a tree in a neighbours garden. Copper nail knocked in does the trick Adam ![]() Andrew Fallacy Tested with 10x 4inch copper nails into base of sycamore 5 years ago and it still lives Where do you get 'copper nails' from? I'd guess they're quite difficult to knock in too as copper is decidedly soft. -- Chris Green · |
#48
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Chris Green wrote:
Where do you get 'copper nails' from? Amazon marketplace |
#49
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On 22/06/2018 11:54, Jim K wrote:
Huge Wrote in message: On 2018-06-21, Mark wrote: Andrew Mawson wrote: "ARW" wrote in message ... On 21/06/2018 18:12, Scott wrote: It's a mutual garden where no-one shows much enthusiasm for gardening. Using weedkiller is DIY gardening. Just dropped 25 litres of the stuff on the roots of a tree in a neighbours garden. Copper nail knocked in does the trick Adam ![]() Andrew Fallacy Tested with 10x 4inch copper nails into base of sycamore 5 years ago and it still lives It's not entirely fallacious. The people who owned this house before us mounted a tap on a cherry tree using brass screws and that was making the tree rather poorly. Admittedly, it wasn't dying. Brass != Copper? Brass is an alloy of Copper and Zinc. SteveW |
#50
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Steve Walker Wrote in message:
On 22/06/2018 11:54, Jim K wrote: Huge Wrote in message: On 2018-06-21, Mark wrote: Andrew Mawson wrote: "ARW" wrote in message ... On 21/06/2018 18:12, Scott wrote: It's a mutual garden where no-one shows much enthusiasm for gardening. Using weedkiller is DIY gardening. Just dropped 25 litres of the stuff on the roots of a tree in a neighbours garden. Copper nail knocked in does the trick Adam ![]() Andrew Fallacy Tested with 10x 4inch copper nails into base of sycamore 5 years ago and it still lives It's not entirely fallacious. The people who owned this house before us mounted a tap on a cherry tree using brass screws and that was making the tree rather poorly. Admittedly, it wasn't dying. Brass != Copper? Brass is an alloy of Copper and Zinc. SteveW Yerss. -- -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#51
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On Fri, 22 Jun 2018 19:12:26 +0100 (GMT+01:00), Jim K
wrote: S Viemeister Wrote in message: On 6/22/2018 6:41 PM, Jim K wrote: Martin Brown Wrote in message: Holly, ivy and buttercups seem to shrug it off too. Keep at them they will succumb ;-) A drop of washing-up liquid will help. Those leaves have a waxy surface, the detergent helps the glyphosate to make contact with the leaf surface. I thought most brands had the evil adjuvants & surfactants already in but I will have a trial next time. -- I thought that too. In fact the concentrated stuff looks like washing up liquid. |
#52
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Scott Wrote in message:
On Fri, 22 Jun 2018 19:12:26 +0100 (GMT+01:00), Jim K wrote: S Viemeister Wrote in message: On 6/22/2018 6:41 PM, Jim K wrote: Martin Brown Wrote in message: Holly, ivy and buttercups seem to shrug it off too. Keep at them they will succumb ;-) A drop of washing-up liquid will help. Those leaves have a waxy surface, the detergent helps the glyphosate to make contact with the leaf surface. I thought most brands had the evil adjuvants & surfactants already in but I will have a trial next time. -- I thought that too. In fact the concentrated stuff looks like washing up liquid. Tell them that's what it is :-) -- -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#53
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On Fri, 22 Jun 2018 22:46:38 +0100 (GMT+01:00), Jim K
wrote: Scott Wrote in message: On Fri, 22 Jun 2018 19:12:26 +0100 (GMT+01:00), Jim K wrote: S Viemeister Wrote in message: On 6/22/2018 6:41 PM, Jim K wrote: Martin Brown Wrote in message: Holly, ivy and buttercups seem to shrug it off too. Keep at them they will succumb ;-) A drop of washing-up liquid will help. Those leaves have a waxy surface, the detergent helps the glyphosate to make contact with the leaf surface. I thought most brands had the evil adjuvants & surfactants already in but I will have a trial next time. -- I thought that too. In fact the concentrated stuff looks like washing up liquid. Tell them that's what it is :-) -- Ecover of course :-) |
#54
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On 22/06/2018 19:12, Jim K wrote:
S Viemeister Wrote in message: On 6/22/2018 6:41 PM, Jim K wrote: Martin Brown Wrote in message: Holly, ivy and buttercups seem to shrug it off too. Keep at them they will succumb ;-) A drop of washing-up liquid will help. Those leaves have a waxy surface, the detergent helps the glyphosate to make contact with the leaf surface. I thought most brands had the evil adjuvants & surfactants already in but I will have a trial next time. They do. In fact the surfactants in commercial formulations are way more dangerous than the active ingredient. But the fact remains that holly and ivy waxy coats can resist them comfortably. I am told that cacti can as well but I have never been brave enough to try it on any of mine. I can believe that cutting the mix with paraffin might work. ISTR SBK does a bit better against the awkward squad. -- Regards, Martin Brown |
#55
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On 22/06/2018 20:31, Chris Green wrote:
Mark wrote: Andrew Mawson wrote: "ARW" wrote in message ... On 21/06/2018 18:12, Scott wrote: It's a mutual garden where no-one shows much enthusiasm for gardening. Using weedkiller is DIY gardening. Just dropped 25 litres of the stuff on the roots of a tree in a neighbours garden. Copper nail knocked in does the trick Adam ![]() Andrew Fallacy Tested with 10x 4inch copper nails into base of sycamore 5 years ago and it still lives Where do you get 'copper nails' from? I'd guess they're quite difficult to knock in too as copper is decidedly soft. Only if it is very pure, and not if it is cold-worked. Or perhaps "copper" nails are actually bronze? 5% tin won't add much to the cost but will make them as strong as steel. --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#56
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On 22/06/2018 18:35, ARW wrote:
On 21/06/2018 21:26, Martin Brown wrote: On 21/06/2018 18:37, ARW wrote: On 21/06/2018 18:12, Scott wrote: It's a mutual garden where no-one shows much enthusiasm for gardening. Using weedkiller is DIY gardening. Just dropped 25 litres of the stuff on the roots of a tree in a neighbours garden. What a waste! Glyphosate is rapidly adsorbed by clay in soil and has to hit green plant material to cause any significant damage. Holly, ivy and buttercups seem to shrug it off too. TBH I never looked at was in the weedkiller. I know that it killed a 16ft conifer in a year just by pouring it on or around the roots. Well dead enough just that they had to cut it down. Doesn't that sound more like SBK? --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#57
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Scott Wrote in message:
On Fri, 22 Jun 2018 22:46:38 +0100 (GMT+01:00), Jim K wrote: Scott Wrote in message: On Fri, 22 Jun 2018 19:12:26 +0100 (GMT+01:00), Jim K wrote: S Viemeister Wrote in message: On 6/22/2018 6:41 PM, Jim K wrote: Martin Brown Wrote in message: Holly, ivy and buttercups seem to shrug it off too. Keep at them they will succumb ;-) A drop of washing-up liquid will help. Those leaves have a waxy surface, the detergent helps the glyphosate to make contact with the leaf surface. I thought most brands had the evil adjuvants & surfactants already in but I will have a trial next time. -- I thought that too. In fact the concentrated stuff looks like washing up liquid. Tell them that's what it is :-) -- Ecover of course :-) Au natrel ;-) -- -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#58
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On 22/06/2018 21:54, Jim K wrote:
Steve Walker Wrote in message: On 22/06/2018 11:54, Jim K wrote: Huge Wrote in message: On 2018-06-21, Mark wrote: Andrew Mawson wrote: "ARW" wrote in message ... On 21/06/2018 18:12, Scott wrote: It's a mutual garden where no-one shows much enthusiasm for gardening. Using weedkiller is DIY gardening. Just dropped 25 litres of the stuff on the roots of a tree in a neighbours garden. Copper nail knocked in does the trick Adam ![]() Andrew Fallacy Tested with 10x 4inch copper nails into base of sycamore 5 years ago and it still lives It's not entirely fallacious. The people who owned this house before us mounted a tap on a cherry tree using brass screws and that was making the tree rather poorly. Admittedly, it wasn't dying. Brass != Copper? Brass is an alloy of Copper and Zinc. Yerss. If anything brass is slightly more reactive than copper so it will do the same thing. ISTR copper inhibits some enzymes in trees that prevent various fungal rots from gaining a hold. The same applies to tree stumps that you want to be rid of without digging them out. Extra nitrogen also speeds up the decomposition and you can still buy rootout under another name as a compost accelerator. Still pretty slow for a big stump. -- Regards, Martin Brown |
#59
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Martin Brown Wrote in message:
On 22/06/2018 21:54, Jim K wrote: Steve Walker Wrote in message: On 22/06/2018 11:54, Jim K wrote: Huge Wrote in message: On 2018-06-21, Mark wrote: Andrew Mawson wrote: "ARW" wrote in message ... On 21/06/2018 18:12, Scott wrote: It's a mutual garden where no-one shows much enthusiasm for gardening. Using weedkiller is DIY gardening. Just dropped 25 litres of the stuff on the roots of a tree in a neighbours garden. Copper nail knocked in does the trick Adam ![]() Andrew Fallacy Tested with 10x 4inch copper nails into base of sycamore 5 years ago and it still lives It's not entirely fallacious. The people who owned this house before us mounted a tap on a cherry tree using brass screws and that was making the tree rather poorly. Admittedly, it wasn't dying. Brass != Copper? Brass is an alloy of Copper and Zinc. Yerss. If anything brass is slightly more reactive than copper so it will do the same thing. ?? Just because it's got copper in it?! Brass is an alloy not a mixture... E.g. Brass screws seem to last extremely un-reactively, esp outdoors, next to no corrosion or leaching. Copper wire can be added onto roof ridges etc purposely to leach to kill mosses etc on the pitches of the roof... -- -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#60
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On 22/06/18 15:52, Scott wrote:
On Fri, 22 Jun 2018 11:05:34 +0100, pamela wrote: Surely there is an obligation on the parties to pay costs incurred by their representative or by the management company? Yes, but we are 'self-factored' meaning the building is managed by the residents, who at the last meeting split 4-4 on the vote. This was for roof repairs where some thought the first bidder was too cheap and others thought the second bidder was too expensive. We therefore did not have the five votes needed for a decision. I am so glad that after 30 years I have moved to a freehold house and no longer have to deal with that sort of thing. -- djc (–€Ì¿Ä¹Ì¯–€Ì¿ Ì¿) No low-hanging fruit, just a lot of small berries up a tall tree. |
#61
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On Thu, 21 Jun 2018 21:49:20 +0100, bert wrote:
In article , Scott writes On Thu, 21 Jun 2018 18:21:42 +0100 (GMT+01:00), Jim K wrote: Scott Wrote in message: On Thu, 21 Jun 2018 18:00:01 +0100, "Brian Gaff" wrote: What is their beef? I'd have thought if you were careful and did it on a still day then hardly anything but your stuff would be affected unless they have some kind of prize plant whose roots are on soil, in which case leave that part untreated. Brian Chemicals into the environment. Eco warriors! What do they wash their clothes & dishes with? Ecover. Ecover is not as green as it seems. I wondered. Produced in the EU for a company in Belgium for sale in the UK. However, in advertising it it not called 'selling the dream' or something like that? |
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