Thanks once again for the warm welcome. I apologise for the lurking!
It must be very handy to have that kind of height in a greenhouse but somehow I don't think next door would be thrilled if I built mine up quite that high! To be honest the height is the main drawback I can see with the design of the Hartley greenhouse. Because it has effectively a 'curved' roof without tall sides from ground level to eaves height I am quite worried that any tall plants will have to be arranged down the middle of the greenhouse which might make moving around inside more awkward. I have also considered lowering the floor inside. In my polytunnel I dug down around a foot and lowered the floor in there and it made quite a big difference, so that might be a possibility.
The cyathea medullaris is one of mypalmshop's 60cm trunked offerings. Apart from a trunkless dealbata and a couple of plug plants of cooperi from Shady Plants in Ireland I have bought my tree ferns from mypalmshop. I have been impressed with the quality of their plants and they have got their packaging down to an art form! All the tree ferns are in the heated greenhouse. I have an electric fan heater and also a gas heater (we have quite a lot of power cuts hence the belt-and-braces!) with thermostats in their and am trying to keep the temperature above 6 degrees with plenty of ventilation when the weather permits. Do you think that will be OK for the cyathea?
New Year New Member
- Arlon Tishmarsh
- Posts: 6957
- Joined: Sun Feb 01, 2009 10:53 am
- Location: Horizontal
Re: New Year New Member
My two cooperi didn't brown off until -5 in the greenhouse (2yrs ago) , +6 will be a doddle. I overwinter them in the garage now.wugga wrote:and am trying to keep the temperature above 6 degrees with plenty of ventilation when the weather permits. Do you think that will be OK for the cyathea?
If you're not infringing any planning laws, i wouldn't worry to much about building the greenhouse up a bit. You can't always live your life for other people. I'm sure there's things your neighbours do that you don't like , thats life. Digging down is ok if there's no risk of flooding or creating a sump / drain for all the surrounding water to run into when it rains.
Re: New Year New Member
I agree with you that My Palm shop package the plants well. Cyatheas don't want to freeze but C Cunninghamii doesn't want to dry out as they don't recover well, from experience. I think I may have saved my C Cunninghamii touch wood.wugga wrote:Thanks once again for the warm welcome. I apologise for the lurking!
It must be very handy to have that kind of height in a greenhouse but somehow I don't think next door would be thrilled if I built mine up quite that high! To be honest the height is the main drawback I can see with the design of the Hartley greenhouse. Because it has effectively a 'curved' roof without tall sides from ground level to eaves height I am quite worried that any tall plants will have to be arranged down the middle of the greenhouse which might make moving around inside more awkward. I have also considered lowering the floor inside. In my polytunnel I dug down around a foot and lowered the floor in there and it made quite a big difference, so that might be a possibility.
The cyathea medullaris is one of mypalmshop's 60cm trunked offerings. Apart from a trunkless dealbata and a couple of plug plants of cooperi from Shady Plants in Ireland I have bought my tree ferns from mypalmshop. I have been impressed with the quality of their plants and they have got their packaging down to an art form! All the tree ferns are in the heated greenhouse. I have an electric fan heater and also a gas heater (we have quite a lot of power cuts hence the belt-and-braces!) with thermostats in their and am trying to keep the temperature above 6 degrees with plenty of ventilation when the weather permits. Do you think that will be OK for the cyathea?
Re: New Year New Member
Hi Charlotte, Welcome. Not many of us on this forum from North Wales. Wugga, isn't that the Welsh's favorite sport. Sorry. You're not a million miles from Crug Farm when you have some money burning a hole in your pocket. What winter low temperatures do you get where you are.
Re: New Year New Member
Hi Jas,
Diolch yn fawr for your welcome!
Wugga was the nickname for Woolley, my first pet sheep! (It's important to live up to those stereotypes of the Welsh!)
I see from your topic on the community forum you're getting quite the battering on the coast - hope you've got through tonight's high tide OK and fingers crossed for the morning. It's been very windy here for weeks now but luckily we're quite high up so no problems with flooding. It does get quite chilly here and we were snowed in for quite a while last year - I love snow but it was wearing a bit thin last year, even for me!
Diolch yn fawr for your welcome!
Wugga was the nickname for Woolley, my first pet sheep! (It's important to live up to those stereotypes of the Welsh!)
I see from your topic on the community forum you're getting quite the battering on the coast - hope you've got through tonight's high tide OK and fingers crossed for the morning. It's been very windy here for weeks now but luckily we're quite high up so no problems with flooding. It does get quite chilly here and we were snowed in for quite a while last year - I love snow but it was wearing a bit thin last year, even for me!
Re: New Year New Member
Yes, you did get a lot of snow last year which lasted for a few days in your area, Luckily in the estuary at sea level it doesn't stay very long, although the tops always look beautiful for some time. I would think you are limited to what you can grow without protection. Keep up the good work.
No problem with tides now as the wind has dropped, just a normal high spring tide. Just as an afterthought I would keep the sheep jokes to yourself or everyone will think we all walk about in wellies!
As for stereotypes I agree entirely. I always think Yorkshire Kris does a good job with with his flat cap and whippet.
No problem with tides now as the wind has dropped, just a normal high spring tide. Just as an afterthought I would keep the sheep jokes to yourself or everyone will think we all walk about in wellies!
As for stereotypes I agree entirely. I always think Yorkshire Kris does a good job with with his flat cap and whippet.
- redsquirrel
- Posts: 12169
- Joined: Thu Feb 26, 2009 8:35 pm
- Location: bristol
- Contact:
Re: New Year New Member
welcome Wugga, i like medularis too but have killed a few now due to my poor overwintering habits. as for the wellies, do you have the LR ones up there or are they the hardcore unmarked ones?jungle jas wrote:Yes, you did get a lot of snow last year which lasted for a few days in your area, Luckily in the estuary at sea level it doesn't stay very long, although the tops always look beautiful for some time. I would think you are limited to what you can grow without protection. Keep up the good work.
No problem with tides now as the wind has dropped, just a normal high spring tide. Just as an afterthought I would keep the sheep jokes to yourself or everyone will think we all walk about in wellies!
As for stereotypes I agree entirely. I always think Yorkshire Kris does a good job with with his flat cap and whippet.
i find LRs give me much more garden time
mars ROVER broken down. headgasket faillure
Re: New Year New Member
Hi Redsquirrel,
I always go for unmarked wellies as they're much cheaper - then customise afterwards with my crayons to prevent any confusion!
I always go for unmarked wellies as they're much cheaper - then customise afterwards with my crayons to prevent any confusion!