Jump to content

Log in or register to remove this advert

nepia

Veteran Member
  • Posts

    5,693
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    9

Everything posted by nepia

  1. nepia

    Bind weed

    You've lost me; sorry
  2. nepia

    Bind weed

    Not sure that's how the insects see it Not having a pop; we ask farmers to grow food for us so they do. Some laxity is therefore needed when there is collateral damage but benefit of experience now suggests that we need to rein in our use of biocides
  3. nepia

    Bind weed

    Best solution depends on level of infestation. We have a moderate amount in the garden which received little attention for the couple of years before we bought the place. If you have the patience digging out the roots can work: yes, you often leave small pieces that grow so go back and do it again. It's working for us; we're definitely getting on top of the stuff. In places it's simply impossible to access the roots so we remove as much as we can, let some top growth reoccur and repeat. It doesn't take forever to defeat bindweed; if you stick at it you can exhaust the roots. We haven't used any chemicals other than against the house where we needed to kill the stuff asap so membrane and shingle could be laid on top
  4. Used to dread the 'French trips' from school on the old ferries - four and a half hours each way 🤢 when I suffered travel sickness a lot as a kid. Then they got the Supercats - way hay; two and a bit hours of smooth flying. Now it's 2024 and... oh dear. 🤞 for a smooth crossing Mick. The six hour drive will be a doddle
  5. @peds Bionnay, just up from Les Hoches. No idea what the aspect was; it was a grey morning with light drizzle. We were under conifer canopy on a mossy mound
  6. I shall ask where we were as I haven't a clue. Foraging is huge amongst the locals as I'm sure you know; neighbour rivalries, closely guarded secret spots etc. Stand by for reply...
  7. A few found recently in the High Alps near Chamonix in conifer forest Feel free to disagree with my Google Lens id's
  8. nepia

    Insects

    And almost every Scabious flower was occupied by 6-spot Burnet moths - hundreds of them
  9. nepia

    Insects

    Caterpillar of the endangered Spurge Hawk Moth
  10. nepia

    Insects

    Recently spent a long weekend with my daughter in the French Alps. Grizzled Skipper Forgotten moth caterpillar Scotch Argus Impressive locust-sized grasshopper
  11. nepia

    Jokes???

  12. Mick; father-in-law has a former street dog of indeterminate age but also believed to be around 11. She has slowed up due to arthritis so he bought some food-fed extract of green-lipped mussel. F-i-l says if he hadn't seen the almost overnight improvement with his own eyes he wouldn't have believed it; reckons it took 2-3 years off her
  13. Did mercifully few Carnivals in my former life. The only memorable one was '86; stood for 8 hours in stair rods of rain 10 yards from one of the big sound systems. I'm sure it had a permanent effect on me. Pardon?
  14. Is there a generous circle of clear ground around the bases? There needs to be as turf absorbs almost infinite amounts of rain
  15. Yes, could do that Mick; a perfectly viable option on reflection. I was probably thinking too much Tulip and not enough apple; you wouldn't get away with such a thing for long with a Tulip
  16. I'd say that the spreading rot would remain confined to the dead heartwood if allowed to continue and I've encountered apples entirely hollow from the ground up for 3m yet still thriving. Presumably at some point the pocket would fill with water and remain full in which case the rot would slow due to reduced oxygen present at the wood/water interface. But in your circumstances I'd drill a drainage hole at an upwards angle into the base of the rot pocket. I did it some years ago with a Tulip tree at home and the union survived for another fifteen years or so until a storm did for it by using the twenty foot long regrowth as levers on it. You will be aware of the difference in durability of apple and Tulip; steel vs butter! The hole I drilled was 20mm in a 300mm stem (approx).
  17. nepia

    Jokes???

    Yes but the word 'sigma' doesn't make sense in the sentence with the other three symbols. Sigma pie?
  18. Jeepers creepers; I'll bet your chest felt like King Kong was pummelling it from inside
  19. I'll dab my toes in as usual but I shan't ling-er; that would be sailfish so I'll fin-ish it here
  20. nepia

    Jokes???

    I get three of the four; can't see the relevance of the third character
  21. There is a pair ( I think) of very old and much propped specimens at Leeds Castle but I've never come across any that big in my work. I think my best effort was a 9" stem in Coulsdon
  22. The hornbeam genus Carpinus is indeed in the birch family, Betulaceae
  23. My (large) garden experience of ponticum is that for every stem large enough to get an Ecoplug or two into there are 20 stems too small. The plant doesn't conveniently grow from a central trunk with all other growth emanating from that; the root and stem system is more of a shallow tangled mat. On a woodland scale I'd expect to need to rip up the entire mat. In hot dry weather you may get away with it being stacked and left to desiccate but in winter it would certainly root and grow again. So ideally you need to burn it or shred it but I get that on a commercial footing those options may not always be viable
  24. nepia

    Jokes???

    VID-20240722-WA0000.mp4
  25. That's a relief! All the best 🤞

About

Arbtalk.co.uk is a hub for the arboriculture industry in the UK.  
If you're just starting out and you need business, equipment, tech or training support you're in the right place.  If you've done it, made it, got a van load of oily t-shirts and have decided to give something back by sharing your knowledge or wisdom,  then you're welcome too.
If you would like to contribute to making this industry more effective and safe then welcome.
Just like a living tree, it'll always be a work in progress.
Please have a look around, sign up, share and contribute the best you have.

See you inside.

The Arbtalk Team

Follow us

Articles

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.