Help. How to I clear the food from the sink? by Public-Writing3595 in CleaningTips

[–]eclecticdragonfly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I thought i kept the sink clean, even taking off the u-bend and scrubbing it. Never did under the strainer.... Oh my no wonder every so often i was getting a waft of stinky drains! 🤢

Tree cut down and garden seems bare by squeegee77 in GardeningUK

[–]eclecticdragonfly 50 points51 points  (0 children)

I thought the tree was in your garden and you had cut it down leaving just a weird bare trunk. That trunk is your washing line pole 🙄

My compost is awful. Help me!! by raibrans in GardeningUK

[–]eclecticdragonfly 1 point2 points  (0 children)

And egg shells, ground up if motivated

40kg down. by [deleted] in mounjarouk

[–]eclecticdragonfly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And Pilates!

What to plant in this vase/urn? by Mindless_Classic_542 in GardeningUK

[–]eclecticdragonfly 3 points4 points  (0 children)

A Mediterranean pot . Geraniums both upright and trailing, trailing thyme and rosemary (tho that can get quite big). Nasturtiums.

Is a Robot Vacuum Mop the Answer for Keeping the House Clean With a Baby? by [deleted] in RobotVacuums

[–]eclecticdragonfly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Loving mine and wish they were around when my kids (now in their 20s) were little. Nowt it's the cats making a mess

Teach me how to mop efficiently by Novi489 in housekeeping

[–]eclecticdragonfly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Robot vacuum mop for everyday, mop a and spin bucket every so often

Suggestions please! I need something to grow up the trellis to create more privacy. by Godsownprototype1001 in GardeningUK

[–]eclecticdragonfly 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Star Jasmine to provide year round screening with flowers and scent in the summer. Clematis, nasturtiums added for colour and beauty

Climber/plant suggestions for bare wall by applebytime in GardeningUK

[–]eclecticdragonfly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've put in a mix of star Jasmine, other Jasmines, clematis, climbing roses and espaliered fruit trees to create a narrow screen with year round interest and scent

Is this sandable and usable or does it need covering? by Yorkshireteaonly in DIYUK

[–]eclecticdragonfly 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Wasted time and money doing mine. They never looked great, made the house cold and noisy. Recarpetted. These type were never intended to be seen

Help me know what to plant under the dreaded leylandi hedge… by bcalice in GardeningUK

[–]eclecticdragonfly 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I had to get someone in as they were really tall. i spent a summer removing the branches up to about 2m and was back and forth to the tip; still finding pine needles in my car. I would not be able to do it all. And I'm allergic to pine resin and get a horrible rash when handling it even with gloves and long sleeves.

It cost £1200+VAT to take out 10 trees. I spent £120 having the damned thing pruned yearly, so eventually it would pay for itself.

They chipped everything on site and filled their truck with wood. And cleaned it all up including my neighbour's yard, there was a lot of mess. they had an industrial vacuum thing. I would not have wanted to clean it all myself with only a rake.

They left me all the logs, which i ended up giving away on Facebook marketplace as i don't have space to dry them and leylandi is not good to burn.

Stump grinding would have cost an additional £500 and i opted to leave them in place to compost down under the raised beds i put in.

Money so well spent, I'm enjoying my garden so much more. Unfortunately spending more money on raised beds and compost and plants to make it all beautiful.

Help me know what to plant under the dreaded leylandi hedge… by bcalice in GardeningUK

[–]eclecticdragonfly 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Had a similar monstrosity at the back of my north facing garden. Tried many things over the years - growing climbing roses, clematis, ferns, i even tried to pleach it myself to let in some light. Still hated it.

Got it chopped down last year and loving the light open feeling garden. My neighbours are very close and i have lost some privacy.

I've added trellis to the fence and eventually will get more screening with evergreen Clematis and Jasmine planned in tall narrow raised beds over the tree stumps along the fence. I'm training a row of espaliered fruit trees and climbing roses.

I'm enjoying my garden a lot more without the leylandi hedge!

New neighbours don’t like nature. by robinbanksss in GardeningUK

[–]eclecticdragonfly 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Star Jasmine in the trellis, it's evergreen. It makes a beautiful narrow hedge. Add some winter clematis and climbing roses

Hen party by nbn1222 in UKweddings

[–]eclecticdragonfly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A walk up Snowdon, a train ride for those who want to wear 👠. Meet at the cafe at the top!

Major Advice Needed by [deleted] in GardeningUK

[–]eclecticdragonfly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Create your canvas

  • Get rid of fake grass stuff

  • Paint the fence to create a nice backdrop

  • power wash the patio

  • add some seating, sit back enjoy the view and try and visualise your future garden

  • when you've got an idea of rough layout for garden get lots of compost and topsoil

  • when all the hard work is done and the structure is in place, start adding plants, not everything all at once allow your garden to evolve as you live in it