Jukebox Actual
Active member
- Location
- Southern Colorado
- Hardiness zone
- 6a
FYI, this is Ostrodamus if you hadn't gathered that yet. 

It's dry but, I've nothing to do. So I could have played golf.
Err. No I couldn't. Because it's a bit wet. They sent me this video with an apology.
They're going to check again on Monday. The course does drain quickly, but won't if the River Mersey is high. The sluice gates through which our course drains into it, will be closed by the pressure of the high river water, they won't re-open until the water level in the river goes below the height of the sluices.
@Mike in that photo above you posted check out the Okra on the tomatoes...that's Beck's Big Buck and next to the carrots is Jambalaya okra. My two favorites.
Well they are all well and good, but surely you need boots that reach your bum - and where is the polo equipment. If I were you, I would consider a little snow shovel as well to go on that trolley. I could, if I wanted get one for the front of my tractor mowerI do have some waterproof golf boots that I wear in the winter,
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I also have "Winter wheels" I can put on my electric trolley.
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Both give you extra grip when the fairways are wet. We do play, when there's big pools of water on some fairways. You just have to work around them with your shot selections. The greens are usually playable unless it is actually raining heavily, as by design they are higher than the fairway.
We've lots of lateral streams, which once the sluices are open drain the fairways quickly.
Bet you notice the difference, I have tried wood of various sorts from sticks to logs. I think it is mainly the constancy of the moisture it promotes, but it all seems to help. Avoid sticks from pruning that are too fresh, you can find they start sprouting, I put them in the compost for six months, then lift them out with a fork and use as a layer between the wood and compost.I went around with my wheelbarrow picking up sticks. After the sticks are all gone I have leaves starting to fall and those I'll use my blower, then put them in plastic bags for leaf mold.
The sticks go into the bottom of my three raised beds that I moved which are now in the sun and will have sticks filling up the bottom so that when I put the compost and garden soil in, it won't take too much to fill them.
I did this same thing, Hugel kulture, when I set the beds up two years ago and when I moved them, all that was there was soil. It doesn't take long, evidently, for burried wood to break down.Bet you notice the difference, I have tried wood of various sorts from sticks to logs. I think it is mainly the constancy of the moisture it promotes, but it all seems to help. Avoid sticks from pruning that are too fresh, you can find they start sprouting, I put them in the compost for six months, then lift them out with a fork and use as a layer between the wood and compost.
Sleeping here but the Lord blessed us with some rain water for my plants.Nothing today it's been snowing.
So pretty !!No gardening today, after the "severe weather" warning given by the BBC for all areas last night.
Well, it wasn't quite that.
I often refer to our location as "The Tropic of Trafford," as the weather is mostly mild, we are protected by hills on three sides.
So this is what we got last night.
An inch and a half of snow.
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The sky is overcast, but the air is still and the temperature is slightly above freezing.
Already the snow is starting to melt.
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Please don't find the rest of the bomb!![]()