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I have greatly enjoyed this thread, thanks for ZZ for his dedication to the task of putting the thread together and much appreciated humour
... and this is how the Pershore crevice garden looked in May 2009 - sorry only one picture...
Quote from: Stone Rider on December 15, 2009, 12:55:38 PMQuote from: Lesley Cox on December 14, 2009, 09:24:42 PMI haven't planted my new troughs yet but before I do, I'm thinking a trip up country for some crevice-type rock would be a good idea. you have somewhere limestone areas and this kind of rock is the best for friendly bacteria cooperation with saxatile plants. Ohoy ZdenekThanks for that advice Zdenek. I was thinking of schist actually, approximately the same colour as my troughs and superbly lichened and weathered. There's masses of it in an area just an hour or so away from me.On the other hand I have a collection of limestone slabs which though too big for the troughs would make a good small crevice garden somewhere nearby. I think they were originally paving stones but never used and when we moved from our previous place we brought them with us "just in case." There are about 30 I think, overgrown but retrievable and well weathered already. (They've been sitting there for 12 years.) They are approx 10cms thick and about 60-80cms square, more or less. If the garden were not to be very high, they could be broken in half and so make twice as many of them. I have some limestone troughs too, carved out of the natural stone, quarried in blocks and a lot of long limestone bricks (to the top and right of the pic below)
Quote from: Lesley Cox on December 14, 2009, 09:24:42 PMI haven't planted my new troughs yet but before I do, I'm thinking a trip up country for some crevice-type rock would be a good idea. you have somewhere limestone areas and this kind of rock is the best for friendly bacteria cooperation with saxatile plants. Ohoy Zdenek
I haven't planted my new troughs yet but before I do, I'm thinking a trip up country for some crevice-type rock would be a good idea.
Lesley, I believe these are the photos ZZ means from the pdfs listed at the beginning of this thread.... they show bigger pieces of limestone, like yours, being used in one piece, not broken up........... the quality is not great, they are taken from the pdf scan of the Journal click to enlarge......