which color border for this runner?
5 years ago
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Which way is REALLY right -- preparing new shrub/tree border
Comments (22)The reason(s) amending of soils in small areas is counterproductive do not vary with the type of soil. Sandy, silty or clay-like, it makes no difference. You do not want to install plants in pockets, strips or zones of one soil texture surrounded by soil of a different texture, as this sets them up for likely problems with how water moves into and out of the soil around their roots. In the case of plants to be left in place for many years (or indefinitely) without lifting and re-planting there is no point in incorporating organic soil texture modification materials (bark, compost, peat...) even if the bed is large enough to minimize or eliminate water movement problems for most of the plants - once the amendments decompose the effects they produce will be lost. Inorganic amendments like perlite and sand do not decompose but enormous amounts of these have to be added to change a heavy soil into a light one. And if too much is added then a droughty and infertile (leaching) situation may be produced, that may be more limiting than a heavy clay-like soil. The most straightforward approach is to choose plants adapted to the existing soil type and plant these in wide, shallow holes dug out of that, loosening it over a wide area beforehand and mulching well afterward. The most satisfactory mulch for woody plants appears to be clean wood chips. If arborist wood chips available nearby tend to have bramble stem sections or other undesirable material mixed in then play chips from a local dealer may be the best bet. Ones we obtain here as cedar play chips are very nice but have become quite pricey, as far as it goes....See MoreWhich Gallicas are good for a mixed border?
Comments (18)What great comments! ... a gallica petting zoo! retire soon! LOL!! Because of all of your very informative comments, I thought of something. ... I do have a big hole that my husband dug with a small trackhoe. The hole is surrounded by very dense layered rock and filled with very good soil. Those suckers couldn't go anywhere. So, which gallica is the best one? I especially want great fragrance and floriferousness. And Denise, how big is your pot? Do you have to take it out and repot it or add new soil? Karen (I am using my son's gardenweb name.)...See Morewallpaper border on top of wallpaper border?
Comments (3)Mix vinegar into water at a ratio of 1 part vinegar to 4 parts water. I am in the process of removing the backing now from our 20 year old wallpaper. First time I have ever done it. The wallpaper came off easily with this solution, in some spots the backing came with it, in other areas it didn't. I am using a plastic spatula to gently scrape the backing paper off the drywall. We were told by a lady at Lowes who had hung wallpaper as a job for years that you can put new border over old (and I am assuming just over the paper backing if you get one that is thick and textured that it won't show through. We will be trying that in our breakfast area where we just had border. Again the paper came off easily but the backing won't budge. My new border is wider and thicker so we think we will be okay. Hope yours turns out okay....See Morewhich runner for stairs and dark hallway???
Comments (6)First one bc I think the light is high maintenance and will show every peace of dirt on your carpet. High traffic area = darker carpet = sanity. :-)...See MoreRelated Professionals
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