Guardian article on gardening myths

Started by caroline7758, January 09, 2011, 10:15:19

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caroline7758

This ws in yesterday's magazine but was originally in Which? so some of you may have seen it before:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2011/jan/08/old-wives-tales-gardens

Some surprising findings!

caroline7758


betula

Surprising indeed,Hope all those chucking urine on the compost read it.

Bit sad really all those snippets of info we hold dear are not true then,bet a few on here will disagree.

Paulines7

Very interesting.  Thank you Caroline for posting the link.

pigeonseed

Very interesting, thanks for posting!

Robert_Brenchley

I think they've got the balance right on piss. It will speed up the decay of dead leaves and the like, but not of a balanced pile. How often, however, do we really bother about balancing it? Unless it's all grass cuttings or other soft herbage, in which case it has too much nitrogen, a modicum of piss won't do any harm, even if it doesn't always speed the process.

caroline7758

I think you're right, robert- don't think i'd ever be so complacent as to say my compost was balanced! Equally, even if coffee grounds don't deter slugs, putting them down will be good for the soil.

telboy

You learn something every day innit?

Didn't see any harmful effects though??

Keep p*ssing I say.
Eskimo Nel was a great Inuit.

Robert_Brenchley

It would probably make rotted-down grass cuttings even stodgier, but I can't think of anything else.

Pescador

Never did trust The Grauniad.
Fresh coffee grounds work for me, so I'll keep using them.
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Miskin, Pontyclun. S. Wales.
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jennym

I had reasonable results in keeping slugs at bay by using a dilute solution of very cheap coffee on a small area, about 8 ft square. Couple of heaped teaspoonfuls to a gallon, watered about 3 or 4 times before sowing and a couple of times after. Think I read it on here, can't recall.

tonybloke

what a load of tosh!

to turn straw (95% carbon) into compost (30% carbon) will take loads of Nitrogen.

that's why 'wet' straw (from stables etc) will compost a darn site quicker than dry straw. go on, try it yourself
You couldn't make it up!

BarriedaleNick

I agree with Tony. 
The straw bale urinal is a wonderful thing...  Few bales of straw at the bottom of the garden - wee on it over winter and come spring - wonderful compost.
Moved to Portugal - ain't going back!

pigeonseed

ah but they were talking about normal mixed compost, not your fancy straw urinals.  ;D

tonybloke

most folk have too much wet, green material in their compost heaps, I add straw and seaweed to mine ;)
You couldn't make it up!

pumkinlover

I add cardboard and paper-soaked if dry, no ones mentioned lime yet- i sprinkle on regularly to counteract acidity!

antipodes

Actually, much as I enjoy reading the Guardian, I find most of what they say about gardening is a load of old twaddle. Obviously written by people who have never actually done any gardening. And that girl that does video articles (Alyssa, maybe her name is? Alysson?) I would like to see her do some really hard work in that plot, like, planting her onions, or digging spud trenches, she always seems to just be fafing around, with gloves on and a pair of secateurs.
2012 - Snow in February, non-stop rain till July. Blight and rot are rife. Thieving voles cause strife. But first runner beans and lots of greens. Follow an English allotment in urban France: http://roos-and-camembert.blogspot.com

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