Westerland--really big & really beautiful.
James_Shaw_San Francisco Bay Area
7 years ago
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princeton701
7 years agoRelated Discussions
suggestions for a really big spider plant
Comments (20)I sow this spider plant and I thought: 1. So amazing plant 2. There are a lot of spiders 3. It's photoshop. I don't know this is photoshop or not. I don't want to tell that this is photoshop. I believe that this is not photoshop. I have never seen such a large Chlorophytum. If this gigant plant exist we can find more pictures this plant in Internet, right? But I can not find another example of such a large plant. This is an example big Spider Plant but this plant is small if we will compare with karlawithak's plant. If this gigant plant exist (I mean karlawithak's plant) we can find more pictures this plant in Internet, right? Can anyone find a picture of such a big spider plant on the Internet? It will be interesting to see another very big Spider Plant....See Morepond skimmer for a really really big pond
Comments (6)You'll never be able to keep it clean. Even well-run pools get leaves and muck and have to be vacumed. Leaves float and sink. And with the sand bottom you'll have to put scuba gear on because a vacuum will just suck up your sand and leaves. Skimmers work with suction. meaning you'd have to have a large pump... huge one.. with multiple pipings and multiple skimmers and the water will have to be blasted back in from the pump which could get the sand oscillating a bit and fogging up the water. Not to mention wildlife will move into this. You also should treat this sitting water. Don't forget birds might drop in it, animals might drown in it, and the water will eventually just muck up in various ways with various bacteria. I envision a real pain. Too bad you couldn't tap into the water, let it flow to a concrete basin, and out .That way you can keep it cleaner and controlled. Instead of letting it flow all the way to the valley, I'd tap into it higher up and let it flow into a concrete basin and I'd let the water keep on flowing and when it flows to an overflow area it will take the top surface with it.. leaves and all. .. and rejoin the stream. That way you always have fresh water, it naturally skims itself and you have a pool that can be cleaned based on leaves that sink, etc. BUT.. I'm sure there's more ways to accomplish this... that's my 2 cents....See MoreJust how big is Mme Alfred Carriere, really?
Comments (59)Hmmmm I hope I can keep my MAC in bounds. It is one of the only plants in the yard kept from last fall’s landscaping. Here starting it’s 3rd year. It was neglected last year due to massive construction on the outside of the house plus full yard landscaping in the fall. The spot of green next to and at its base is Gruss an Teplitz, which I thought would hide the lower bare sticks on MAC but I am seeing pictures in this thread showing MAC looking good all the way to the ground. The is the first year getting substantial blooms. She starts out light pink and opens to white for me. I only smell her fragrance when I bring a bloom inside and then she is quite strong....See MoreIs converting a shower into a "barrier-free" shower A REALLY BIG DEAL?
Comments (12)Thank you both, Omelet and Joseph Corlett: I am just starting my research, and so of course I started with Garden Web! I should add Garden Web slash houzz! But next thing is I'm downloading the NC State guide, Omelet, for a little light reading later this evening. Thank you for that. I realized when I prematurely broke my hip ( I was 58 at the time, long before the more usual age of 80something, and no doubt a result of the daily prednisone I take). Negotiating the shower is still a vivid memory, made worse by the memory of my mother going down as I was holding her and we tried to step over the "barrier." (I'm caregiver, she's 88 and has got dementia, and almost no speech, and lives with my husband and me). In the past five years that was the closest she came to eliciting what would have been a real "comment" from my sweet Irish mother. This house has three bathrooms: one bathroom has shower only, one tub only, and the master has both shower and tub. But both showers have a barrier! .We've had little choice but to switch her to daily bed baths. The manager of the local Council on Aging told me in passing that she pays a local company $4-5K to retrofit a bathroom so certain of her clients can stay living in their homes. (Of course it may be that part of the true cost is picked up by the construction company because they are definitely doing the best kind of charity work). I've got to say I like a $4-5K number much better than the $10-12 @Sophie Wheeler hit me with! Except I got Sophie's exact number, $10-12, in a recent conversation with a big box store employee. And Sophie I was way impressed by your expertise, the effect I'm sure of hitting me with: "dropping the joists" (requires structural work.) I know more about dropping plates and glasses... @Joseph Corlett: I agree about the positives of a barrier-free home, and many of these "universal" changes can be done now in ways that don't necessarily shout "two old folks reside here" or "careful, a handicapped person baths here" and they do look great. And costs (like for the walk-in tub) are coming down for sure. I considered a walk-in tub even (both my mother and I would enjoy it) and were we staying in this house in this area I probably would go ahead and do it. Doing an upgrade of the master bath is yes because it needs work but yet to what extent and cost is TBD as ready funds are extremely limited. The main goal of whatever work we can do is to help us get the house sold quickly and to finally return home to my husband's native California, something we've been attempting for the past decade! But I should really keep that depressing fact in mind because who is to say something else won't happen (like so many times before) to keep us stuck in this house. (Though it is a beautiful house and it does sit on an unusual acre and a half in which our sweet dog Remy does sometimes run and enjoy himself in reckless abandon; if not way back in 1999 we wouldn't have bought it for our then two precious dogs to frolic in and enjoy, having relocated Prince and Honey from their paradise in southern California to a totally new way of life in N.E. Florida. But Joseph, just as I probably wouldn't have listened to well-meaning advice, (I did marry my first husband even though my mother did try to emphasize to the very day of the ceremony that there was no need to "rush" into anything) there's no telling the young and superbly healthy that a bigger doorway to the loo is a good idea. They will need to learn this for themselves. Until then they will continue their merry way, and maybe even install what I consider to be a "trendy addition", a "freestyle" bathtub, in their first home... just place it facing out to the view, in the middle of the floor, and please don't anyone forget the "telephone," folks. A special note to @catbuilder: If your intention was to rob me of the three hours sleep I was hoping to get, you were successful. In fact I'm still wondering why there'd be a need to "drop joists" or "lower the shower floor." But I aim to learn all of these details. But you see last summer I helped a friend design a new master bath in his previous home, which he was converting to a rental. A major part of this new bathroom was a new and huge shower, installed right where the previous shower had existed. I helped him figure out the correct Schluter system, etc. and then turned my attention elsewhere. I later showed up to view the progress, and as expected the travertine tile was in, and it had been beautifully installed from side to side, from end to end; need I say no barrier, no curb was anywhere near the property!! This was a ground floor bath, as is mine. I never heard mention of the word "joists" and I think my friend would have been on the phone immediately if he did. Maybe joists and all of this work that involves did come up and he sorted it out without me. It's possible but not likely. Does the home's age matter? (When work is being done on one of his two sweet little beach homes I'm usually the "unannounced" general contractor. I'm also the unpaid GC but he knows he only gets what he does (not) pay for!) And I have to get to work everyone. You have kickstarted my brain on this project! You are all wonderful courageous people to stick your necks out voluntarily, putting to good use your expertise and doing it such a neighborly way, whether helping many of us in a huge and detailed way, or helping us figure out for ourselves just where to start. I thank you very much for that....See Moresultry_jasmine_nights (Florida-9a-ish)
7 years agorosecanadian
7 years agokentucky_rose zone 6
7 years agojim1961 / Central Pennsylvania / Zone 6
7 years agoPrettypetals_GA_7-8
7 years agolucillle
7 years agoDonna Roesink Zone 6a Ohio
7 years ago
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