Gardening Products

Tips for the Gardener

Gardening Aprons and Tool Holders

Posted: January 18th, 2012 | Author: hortoris | Filed under: Tools and Equipment | No Comments »

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This year I have found 3 trowels when emptying and spreading my compost heap. I am not claiming that a tool belt or pocketed apron would have prevented me loosing them in the first place but you never know.
Apart for comments about the small size of this apron it gets good reviews from Amazon buyers. They are particularly happy with the price (£8.25) and the functionality.

I have no discernible system and carry my secateurs, string and bits and pieces in numerous pockets of an old gardening jacket. When I get warm the jacket comes off. As I say no system.

There is a wider range of Aprons available from Amazon. There are some Laura Ashley ones for ladies and some more robust ones that the picture above. Have a look at the range.

If I was investing in an apron I would want it to:

carry tools but also a mobile phone and note book and pencil in a dry zippered pocket .
protect me from sharp prickles and cutting leaves and stabs by my own tools.
keep my gardening clothes protected from the worst of the dirt.
keep out of the way of my activity and actions.

Tool Belts and Holsters

I am not sure about tool belts that hang in front of me when I am gardening but there is a range of products available in garden centres, Homebase and B&Q
I like the look of the Felco holster and will put one on my wish list. amazon

Book Cover

Looks like I will have to belt up!


Calcified Seaweed Treatment and Benefits

Posted: January 8th, 2012 | Author: hortoris | Filed under: Growing Aids | 1 Comment »

Garden Chemicals

What is Calcified Seaweed

    • Calcified seaweed is dried seaweed and lime or other calcium based salts
    • Calcified seaweed is an organic substance without any nasty chemicals. There is concern that it is no longer approved by the Soil Association for use in organic growing, due to concerns that the harvesting of this material is not sustainable and has adverse effects on the marine environment.
    • Seaweed is rich in minerals, encourages beneficial soil bacteria, helps improve heavy soil structure and neutralises acid soils.

Uses of Calcified Seaweed

    • As a soil improver and clay breaker it breaks up the heaviest clay without damaging soil pH.
    • As a compost accelerator it speeds up the breakdown of organic garden waste.
    • Seaweed adds trace elements and minerals to the soil.
    • Calcified seaweed neutralises acid soil
    • Adding seaweed is beneficial to bacteria and is used in lawn treatment.

Maxicrop Organic Cal-Sea-Feed Calcified Seaweed 6kg tub from Amazon


Terracotta Pots – Best are British

Posted: January 7th, 2012 | Author: hortoris | Filed under: Tools and Equipment | No Comments »

Pots for potting

I like UK made terracotta or clay pots. Good pots are made frost hardy and should last through all the British seasons. Imported pots have often been made in warm climates where they do not know the meaning of cold never mind frost.

Why Clay Pots not Plastic

  • Old pots do sometimes collect a white salt deposit on the outside. You can see that on the photograph or the old pot collection above. As long as the pot is washed in a solution containing a disinfectant they can be reused indefinitely.
  • Pots are porous and let in air to the roots.
  • Evaporation from the clay pot keeps the roots cool. Plastic and particularly black plastic boils the roots of your plants.

Tips for Maintaining Plant Pots

  • Avoid pots getting top heavy in windy conditions. Too much plant growth can get caught by a wind, blow the pot over and smash the pot. For tall plants weight the bottom of the pot.
  • Pots can freeze to the ground and this weakens the bottom of the pot until it falls off. Use bricks or special feet to stand the pot on during winter.
  • Keep the outside of decorative pots clean or algae and moss will be encouraged and discolour your pot.
  • If you want to artificially age your pot coat it in Yoghurt to encourage green algae growth.


Amazon offer

any number of plant pots. They come in all shapes and sizes but terracotta pots are few and far between. Perhaps it is because they are heavy and expensive to deliver, all the more strange that we see Chinese pots in many garden departments at DIY stores.

If you break your pot do not despair you can make a feature like the one below.
Broken pots


Best Organic Plant Fertiliser

Posted: December 14th, 2011 | Author: tejvan | Filed under: Products | No Comments »

These are some of the best organic plant foods and how they can be used.

  • Blood Meal – high in nitrogen for grass and leafy growth e.g. Vegetables like Cabbage
  • Bone Flour / Meal – Nitrogen and Phosphate. Quick acting for strong growth.
  • Fish Meal – low Potash, high Nitrogen and Phosphate.
  • Fish / Blood / Bone – Nitrogen and Phosphate. Apply around plants on planting
  • Poultry Manure – Good all round plant food. Helps for soil preparation and for putting around new plants.
  • Rock Potash – good for flowers and fruits. Offers slow release of potash over a couple of years.
  • Seaweed Meal – Nitrogen and Potash. Also excellent source of trace minerals.
  • Wood Ash – High in Potash. Good for fruits and flowers. Quick acting.

Book Cover

Organic Plant food for bedding plants

Also consider liquid organic feeds such as:

  • Compost Tea
  • Comfrey feed and
  • Liquid Seaweed.

Related

  • Home made organic garden sprays
  • Best Plant Food
  • Fertilizers for growth
  • Organic Plant Food at Amazon
  • Read more about Organic Seaweed

Organic Blend Manure

Posted: November 7th, 2011 | Author: hortoris | Filed under: Products | No Comments »

Manure

Organic Blend manure is a trade name rather than a description. Obviously there will be organic materials in the manure because that is what it is all about.

Pros and Cons of Packaged Organics

    I am a bit concerned that the packaging fails to prominently identify the animals in this farmyard.
    Farmyard animals may have been treated with medicines and chemicals that are expelled in to the manure and I do not think this is Organic in the true sense of the word.
    A ‘special blend of organic nutrients’ could be blood fish and bone or just a way of saying horse muck.
    ‘Contains humus’ well lets not be surprised!
    ‘Invigorates’ roses, flowers fruit and vegetables Mmmm some claim.

    On the plus side the manure should be sterile (unlike the stuff I collect from the stables).
    I would expect the manure to be weed free (unlike the stuff I collect from the stables).
    The manure is more friable and textured (unlike the stuff I collect from the stables).

Buyer beware ‘where there is muck there’s brass’ to mix two sayings. Vendors (retailers and manufacturers) are out to make a profit whilst gardeners are out to make a great garden and in my case without too many plastic bagged products.
If you can’t acquire your own ‘Organic’ may not be worth the extra price but it enhances the feel good factor and may do your garden good.


Hover Mower Tips on Use and Safety

Posted: November 6th, 2011 | Author: hortoris | Filed under: Tools and Equipment | 1 Comment »

mow

Hover Mower Tips

  • Hover mowers are quick and easy to use but they do not leave stripes in your grass.
  • Use hover mowers to keep your grass tidy but consider a cylinder mower for a top quality look to your lawn.
  • The special mowers for long grass are an excellent way of clearing space like a hovering scythe.
  • The electric Hover mowers are fine for small lawns and are far lighter than most other lawnmowers but they are unlikely to collect up the cut grass.
  • When mowing a bank or slope stand at the top, attach a rope if you need too then swing and lower the mower.
  • Mow up and down not across a slope and take extra care on any uneven ground.
  • Handles generally fold so the machine can be hung from a shed or garage wall making them extremely space efficient

For Safeties Sake

    Before Using Your Mower

  • Read the instruction book, it may seem obvious but best to be prepared.
  • Fill the petrol tank before you start as pouring petrol into a hot engine can be as dangerous as smoking.
  • Examine the area to be cut for stones, bits of metal, toys or pets.
  • Set the cutting height, not too short!
  • When starting the machine keep it still, perhaps by putting your foot on the hood.
  • Hover mowers do not have wheels so they must be carried onto and off the lawn.Lift with care and buy one that is light enough for you to manage.

While Mowing

  • Wear heavy shoes with a good grip and keep children away from dangerous machinery.
  • Do not carry the mower whilst it is running it will not float from one lawn to the next.
  • Keep the mower flat as it is designed to stop ‘flying stones’ by hovering close to the ground. Do not mow over gravel.
  • Do not try to use your mower as a cultivator some areas may be so overgrown they need a machete.
  • Don’t take risks or walk backwards as you may pull the machine on top of you.
  • Safety regulations require all new electric mowers to have elaborate safety switches that usually require two handed use and a constant grip

Amazon supply virtually anything and that includes this range of Hover Mowers

mower blade

The photograph of a rotating blade is under a creative commons license 2.0 by Jovike.

See also Gardeners Tips for more safety advice.


Compost Activators & Makers

Posted: October 21st, 2011 | Author: hortoris | Filed under: Products | 3 Comments »

Copy of DIY 161

Compost making is a productive activity for gardeners. All vegetable waste from the kitchen and garden can be used in a compost heap to rot down into good compost. A mix of ‘green’ leafy material and ‘brown’ twiggy material will make the best compost. Green is nitrogen rich and brown is carbon and trace element rich.

Compost Making Essentials

  • The compost material needs to rot down and there are ways to help this process.
  • Insects, worms and bacteria are key as they chew there way through the material. Chopping it up provides more access points for the critters to chomp at.
  • Rotting happens better when slightly damp rather than when bone dry.
  • Heat speeds up the process and this will be improved with air and an activator.

Activators and Compost Makers

  • Adding a spadeful of soil mixed in to the heap will add soil microbes and worms.
  • Turning a compost heap introduces more air and avoids compaction. The introduction of this extra oxygen can stimulate a new round of warm rotting.
  • Animal urine adds natural salts and encourages critters to get on with the composting process.
  • Chemical additives in powder form like Ammonium sulphate or proprietary products like Garrotta can speed up the heating. Liquid activators like Biotal perform a similar function and this is an eco-friendly product.
  • If the heap is dry I water with Comfrey leaf water. (Soaked Comfrey leaves from an old water butt).
  • The longer the temperature stays high, the shorter time will be needed for rotting.  Nitrogen  warms up fastest so grass clippings, nettles and comfrey leaves are good additives.

Compost makers, activators and additives are available from good garden centers and DIY shops or from Amazon

You can collect fallen leaves with a multi tine rake
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For a labour saving job you can buy a garden vacuum from Amazon.
Book Cover
Read more Easy tips on Composting leaves

Read about Quicker better compost.


Garden Frost Protection

Posted: October 17th, 2011 | Author: tejvan | Filed under: Tools and Equipment | 1 Comment »

Oxford Botanic Gardens

These Gunnera leaves have been used as a natural frost protection. Before the first frosts, you can place some straw over crowns of plants and keep them in place by the giant leaves. This helps to offer some frost protection which should help them survive the cold of the year. As an added advantage it also looks quite attractive in its own right.

Fleece Protection for Plants.

Horticultural fleece is a simple but effective tool to wrap around individual plants or cover a row of tender plants / vegetables.

Book Cover

Horticultural fleece can also be a great way of protecting plants and vegetables from pests such as cabbage butterfly.

Individual Plant Protection

If you have a few pots which would benefit from frost protection, you can buy these individual plant fleece liners. Plant fleece protectors

This is a more expensive way of buying fleece, but, maybe more convenient for a small number of plants or pots.

Tips on Using Garden Fleece.

  • Make sure it is well pegged down.
  • Take advantage of any natural frost protection such as moving pots to a sheltered south wall.
  • Remember fleece protection will keep temperatures higher, but, it cannot guarantee against frost.
  • For tender plants, you have to keep them inside.

Poly Tunnels

For a bigger range of frost protection, the best option may be a poly tunnel. This is a cheap version of a greenhouse. It doesn’t look too attractive in the garden, but, it is pretty efficient and helping frost protection. Poly tunnels

Cloche Protection

For a more attractive garden frost protection, try a Cloche. These look both elegant and help provide environment of a mini greenhouse, though bear in mind in late summer they can become quite hot on a clear sunny day. Cloche protection

Natural Frost Protection

iris Unguicularis

These Iris Unguicularis have been placed against a south facing wall in a dry, free draining soil. A good free draining soil is often as important as protection against cold. A combination of wet and cold can be much more damaging than just frost.

Begonia plants are often the first to succumb to air frost. get the corms inside and protected for winter before the ground is also frozen.

Dahlia leaves go black as soon as they are bitten by the frost bug. Then is the time to cut down the haulms and dig up the tubers for winter storage in dry frost free conditions.

Useful Products

  • Horticultural Fleece at Amazon.co.uk
  • Cloche at Amazon.co.uk

Related articles

  • Frost Damage to plants
  • Winter Flowering Plants
  • Growing Veg in the greenhouse

Humate Biologically Active Plant Food

Posted: October 12th, 2011 | Author: hortoris | Filed under: Products | No Comments »

Humic acids are eco-friendly compounds derived from soil, peat, and humus. Humic substances are formed by the microbial degradation of dead plant matter and when used as plant food it seems to be a form of recycling.
Humic product vendors claim they greatly improve the soil and promote beneficial micro-organisms and bio-life within the plants root zone area.
I first encountered these new products at the Glee show for garden centres and horticulturalists in Birmingham in September

Claimed Benefits

  • Stimulates seed germination
  • Promotes  rapid root development and helps layering
  • Reduces transplant shock
  • Promotes increased immune system and resistance to pests and disease
  • Decreases watering requirements and stimulates weak plants
  • Grows green foliage, thicker stems and larger buds
  • Reduces residual pesticides and nitrate
  • Backed by 40+ years of research in organic Humate base agriculture products
  • Works in any growing medium…no expensive hydroponics necessary, and no need to change the growing medium between crops

Humates consisting of biologically active fulvic acids and humic acids are crucial to life on earth because they provide a biochemical bridge between mineral and living plant matter. Humic and fulvic acid are powerful chelaters and help to increase nutrient absorption.

Green OK
have a range of products which also include good old NPK so the plants shouldn’t suffer if you decide to experiment.
They are part of the Latvian Institute of Humic Studies and the product are just arriving on the shelves of UK retailers

Snake oil or a breakthrough in plant nutrition? Well seaweed is a great additive so will Latvian soil extracts work as well? I have yet to try the products but hope too soon. I will report back


Organic Hoof and Horn Fertilizer

Posted: September 28th, 2011 | Author: hortoris | Filed under: Growing Aids, Uncategorized | No Comments »

high trees 132

Hoof and Horn or ‘Hoof and Horn Meal’ is a valuable organic fertilizer.
Ground in to a powder the hooves and horns of animals from slaughter houses makes this nitrogen rich granular fertilizer. The cooked, ground, dehydrated cattle hooves and horns also contains phosphates for root growth.

Using Hoof and Horn

  • Fine ground the Hoof and Horn will provide a quick hit of nitrogen and some phosphates.
  • A coarser ground product will be slower to release the goodness.
  • Hoof and Horn is usually worked into the top of the soil at about 2oz per square yard.
  • Take care as fine roots can be burnt if applied to thickly.

Uses of Hoof and Horn

  • Hoof and Horn is a useful top-up or stop-gap organic fertilizer for nitrogen hungry plants and on poor soil.
  • Used to increase green leaf growth and on vegetable when they have overwintered.
  • Hoof and Horn increases root growth
  • Organically improves soil structure
  • Top dressing of Hoof and Horn as a stop-gap measure when growing hungry vegetables including brassicas, tomatoes and lettuce.
  • Can be used instead of manure on rhubarb plants and around large fruit trees such as Nectarine and Peaches
  • Hoof and Horn is sometimes used as a compost activator to speed decomposition

Compare Hoof and Horn to Other Fertilizers

  • Hoof and Horn Meal is is equivalent to Blood Meal in Nitrogen content. The nutrient availability is slower, which is better for organic crops causing less leaf burn.
  • It nutrient availability starts at around 4-6 weeks and can lasts 12 months.
  • It contains Phosphorus for stem and root growth.
  • Hoof and Horn nitrogen content is comparible with Blood Meal. The slower release rate of the former is better timed with plant uptake rates.
  • At normal application rates it will not be damaging or wasteful.
  • Hoof and Horn has a strong smell that may attract animals but it dissipates more rapidly than that created with Bone Meal.
  • Not seen packaged up as frequently as it was at one time Hoof and Horn is worth looking out for
  • The nearest substitute we have found is Chempak 2 a product range supplied by Thompson & Morgan


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