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Author Topic: Shaftesbury snowdrop study, sale and social 2015  (Read 12960 times)

steve owen

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Re: Shaftesbury snowdrop study, sale and social 2015
« Reply #90 on: March 03, 2015, 08:14:30 PM »
Steve have you ever thought that Jeyes Fluid is killing all flora and fauna in the soil. When a bulb with stag arrives it runs riot because there is nothing there to stop it
Well, I'm a bit surprised at the "killing all flora and fauna in the soil" Mark.  You walked round my garden two weeks ago with Jo, did it really look like the Sahara desert? (You didn't say so whilst you were here). The soil was fine, then stag arrived - in that order - in certain areas, not everywhere. Left untreated, it spreads in the soil.

Other people on this forum send me PMs saying the same. Its a problem that dare not speak its name and the reason for including it in the Shaftesbury talk was to get it more into the open and talked about.   Jeyes was just one of a range of measures I talked about. Between them they have first contained and now are rolling back the problem. Like Arnold Schwarzenegger, the worms will be back. Meanwhile alpines, bulbs and herbaceous plants grow happily, including in those areas that are currently being treated for Stag. And I could list here names you would recognise of reputable snowdrop growers and nurserymen who also accept the need to treat and prevent Stag.

 But if you've got healthy soil, no bad organisms, and happy worms, long may it last. ;)
NCPPG National Collection Holder for Galanthus
Beds/Bucks border

Alan_b

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Re: Shaftesbury snowdrop study, sale and social 2015
« Reply #91 on: March 03, 2015, 09:53:42 PM »
Steve have you ever thought that Jeyes Fluid is killing all flora and fauna in the soil.

Surely this is not just an issue confined to the use of Jeyes Fluid.  If you use fungicide you are liable to kill all the nearby fungi, good and bad.  If you use an insecticide you are liable to kill all nearby insects, good and bad.  In both instances you will create a 'vacuum' and as nature abhors a vacuum you have to hope that what moves in afterwards is good or neutral and not bad.  It's this last stage of what comes afterwards that perhaps needs looking-at more carefully.   
Almost in Scotland.

steve owen

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Re: Shaftesbury snowdrop study, sale and social 2015
« Reply #92 on: March 04, 2015, 07:14:53 PM »
My alpine bed today with maybe a couple of hundred bees enjoying the sunshine and the flowers....
NCPPG National Collection Holder for Galanthus
Beds/Bucks border

colineddie1

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Re: Shaftesbury snowdrop study, sale and social 2015
« Reply #93 on: May 31, 2015, 12:19:40 AM »
Your bed/border looks amazing Steve - well done
The proud owner of 4 cats that love to shovel bulbs around the garden for fun!!

steve owen

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Re: Shaftesbury snowdrop study, sale and social 2015
« Reply #94 on: June 12, 2015, 11:17:06 PM »
Thanks Colin. Busy now applying a Provado drench against narcissus fly.
NCPPG National Collection Holder for Galanthus
Beds/Bucks border

 


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