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Cornerstone Gardens and Ponds

“We at Cornerstone Design & Projects Ltd are garden and pond designers and creators of almost ten years experience and are committed to providing excellent service and also high quality garden and pond products – products that are proven in quality and reliability."

James Scott
Tips from the potting shed -

Summer - at last?

Well, the effort’s paid off. The garden is awash with flowers and blooms and am hoping that for the next few weeks there will be less basic work to do in the garden. I can just enjoy it. The lack of rain is causing the lawn to look a bit ragged but some feed and some water will keep it looking reasonable until ‘the rains’ arrive. The tomatoes and cucumbers in the greenhouse are rocketing upwards and so far they look very healthy - no bugs evident but ready for whitefly if it appears. Saw slug trails - but slugs deterred round the cucumbers especially, without using pellets (the cats can get in the greenhouse) – by taking a cheap nylon sponge/foam roll, the sort used on a roller for painting, and salami-sliced some rings about 1 cms thick. Cut through to form a collar, and sprinkled with only a few grains of fine salt round the collar. The salt goes into the foam and the collar then fitted at the base of the plant. I remove the collar, of course, for watering. So far – no further signs of slugs. Back to the flower garden – dead-heading is a job enjoyed by ‘the one in-doors’ and that keeps the flowers coming on, and the perennials I might cut back later and at least they’ll put out new growth. The roses are hardly troubled by greenfly at the moment – hard winter effect perhaps? – but black-spot already showing and I’ll treat that with wetted sulphur. Planning for next year, I shall find a warm spot in the garden, prepare the soil fairly finely, and sow some herbaceous perennials. I can thin-out and transplant later. I’ll do the same, for a change, with foxglove and hollyhock. Obviously I am planning to sow salad vegetables on a regular basis. Difficult to beat freshly cut lettuce and rocket. Unfortunately, I missed trimming a hedge and I suspect there are now nesting birds still in there – so I’ll have to squeeze past on the path by that hedge, grind my teeth and remember for next year. My greenhouse, I discovered last year, is in a flight path – for young birds – so last year and now, I’ve made sure the birds can see the glass, so to speak and avoid untimely deaths.


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Cornerstone Projects
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Lake project: Withypool 2006

"The Glory of the Garden lies in more than meets the eye…”

Rudyard Kipling