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Thanks Paul..... I'm getting less enthusiastic by the minute. The smells I like in the kitchen are those of delicious food cooking.
after moving the first tonne, I'm thinking that another way MUST be easier!
Quote from: Maggi Young on January 31, 2011, 02:23:08 PMafter moving the first tonne, I'm thinking that another way MUST be easier!There's a much easier way Maggi, have Ian move it instead. Seriously now, is Seramis - aka Turface in North America - the same as Lecadan in Denmark? Seems to me when I received a plant - Shortia as I recall - many years ago that was grown in Lecadan solely the particles were very porous looking and like pressed clay - i.e kitty litter. I tried incorporating turface into a bulb mix (mainly around the bulb) thinking it would draw excess moisture away from the bulb. Well it probably did that until it got saturated and this resulted in too much dampness around the bulb with disastrous results. Coincidentally I have just read Paul C.'s excellent article on drainage in pots. I have made the fatal mistake of making a coarser grittier mix in the upper half of the pot in the region of bulb. You'd think after all these years one would have at least figured a decent mix for bulbs especially Galanthus, but not I. Amaryllidaceae are the crankiest I find, must be the eternal dampness of our coastal air (dense fog).johnw
Thanks for the clarification John. You may note I had gone back to my posting while you posted and changed to Lecadan was "less like kitty litter" (than the fine grade of turface here). Have you tried using Lecadan the same way as Seramis? The Shortias were certainly well grown and settled into a bark peat mix without a hitch. Theey were mainly larger and looked like spheres split in half with a bubbled interior.johnw
Ian bagged four tonnes of sand and gravel and then we've unloaded it from those bags , barrowed it and reloaded it to storage bays over the last few days.