How does your garden grow?

The Spider House

Arachnobaron
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Aug 12, 2020
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563
..... With silver bells and cockle shells and pretty maids all in a row.

Another nursey rhyme
Mary had a little lamb she called him Illy Ollocks, she threw him up in the air and caught him by his.....



.....Tail 🤣
 

aprilmayjunebugs

Fiery but Mostly Peaceful
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Nov 7, 2019
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It's almost that time again! 🐝 🌺 🌞
My little weed garden survived the only one ice/snow event this year. I'll be sad to see it go.
20240213_114833.jpg
 

DomGom TheFather

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I'm putting up a greenhouse this year, I guess.
I was gifted one of those cheap polycarbonate jammers. I don't know how it will hold up but I started assembling what I could in the basement while it's still dead winter.
IMG_20240213_172447162.jpg

Otherwise, stuck in the seed box stage.
 

aprilmayjunebugs

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My peer pressure plant has arrived!
20240412_145841.jpg

Doesn't look too bad for having been in a box for days. I have questions though, I ordered inoxia.
 

DomGom TheFather

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It's only a weed if you don't want it there.

Might have been a tad early on the aubergines.
IMG_20240413_092405334.jpg
Melons are up.
IMG_20240417_172314957.jpg
 
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Charliemum

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Mar 5, 2021
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OK gardening peeps I need some help I have a large corkscrew Hazel in my front garden it's been there 20 years and has always been happy in its spot covered in orb weavers, but today I noticed brown/red lumps all over its branches. So I snapped a small branch with 2 on to get a better look and try to remove the lumps. I haven't seen anything like these before and assumed they were hardened sap the tree was leaking for some reason.
To my surprise when I pulled the lump burst and was filled with eggs ! There are easy 100 of these things on my tree and I have tried to Google it but I mustn't be writing the right thing because I can't find anything like this. 20240514_082907.jpg 20240514_082828(0).jpg
I live in the North East of the UK if it helps but I was hoping maybe someone on here may know or has seen them before.
I feel incredibly guilty because it was an egg sac and if I had known i wouldn't of touched it.
 

Charliemum

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After alot more digging turns out they are Eulecanium tiliae or the nut scale as they are commonly known. They are parasitic bugs that hold the eggs underneath them and live off the sap in the tree by burrowing into it. I must admit I feel a bit better knowing I didn't just destroy some butterfly's eggs, but thought I would update as I found out what they are 😊 thanks anyways 😊
 

fiendish foe

Arachnopeon
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Nov 17, 2020
Messages
22
I bought 4 plants I was told were jalapeños and 3 have grown bell peppers while the 4th one bears nothing. I’d feel cheated if I wasn’t a fan of stuffing peppers.
 

Westicles

Arachnobaron
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Dec 9, 2018
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I bought 4 plants I was told were jalapeños and 3 have grown bell peppers while the 4th one bears nothing. I’d feel cheated if I wasn’t a fan of stuffing peppers.
Nothing wrong with stuffed bell peppers, but yeah, I'd be aggravated as well. Nothing fun about not getting what you paid for
 

fiendish foe

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Nov 17, 2020
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22
Yeah, that’s something that could also be a lot worse since I found out they’ve also in the past accidentally labeled Trinidad scorpions and habaneros as Cajun belles. I couldn’t imagine the horror of a new hobbyist biting into what they think is a moderately hot bell pepper and getting a mouthful of habanero.
 

Wolfram1

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Jul 1, 2018
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Is any one of you practicing permaculture in your garden?
If so what are the ups and downs you have experienced?


I am thinking of mulching my small shaded big city garden with wood chips, in order to build up a forest-like mycorrhiza and to soften the compacted soil through an increase of microorganisms. And later plant some of the wild groundcovers like wild garlic, violets, lily of the valley, snowdrops, etc.

If any of you have any experience with this in your own garden/land I would love to get some of your experiences.

And has anyone had to deal with english ivy taking over? I dont think we have any grass left, not that i mind that, but how do you get rif of ivy in fafour of a mix of other understory plants?

Here is a quick look at things now:
20240511_175851.jpg
i still need to finish the stone path, and after that i may work on a small bird bath and feeding station, though i need to think of a way to avoid the crows taking over.

As summers get hotter, i'd like to make the garden better for birds and insecsts as well as improve soil life.
 

IntermittentSygnal

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Aug 7, 2022
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After alot more digging turns out they are Eulecanium tiliae or the nut scale as they are commonly known. They are parasitic bugs that hold the eggs underneath them and live off the sap in the tree by burrowing into it. I must admit I feel a bit better knowing I didn't just destroy some butterfly's eggs, but thought I would update as I found out what they are 😊 thanks anyways 😊
I have issue with these too on an olive tree. :-\
 
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