Gogglebox's Garden Blog:Year Three
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Same rules apply here as on the Main Community forum, be polite, tolerant, and courteous. If you are not happy with a post,'report' it.
Users cannot start their own topics in this area, so if you want a blog topic started, contact using contacts form at the bottom of the page
Re: Gogglebox's Garden Blog: The Temple of Light
Plastic , blutty cheek, now silk thats a different matter altogether. 10/10 for ingenuity Goggle, its a sexy looking space. Sometimes you have to take short cuts and compromises, in this instance imo it works
Re: Gogglebox's Garden Blog: The Temple of Light
The oldest polycarbonate was I believe discovered at Angkor Wat
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Re: Gogglebox's Garden Blog: The Temple of Light
well thats this topic ruined for me now. goggs,how could you do that in public???
im never watching baywatch again
im never watching baywatch again
mars ROVER broken down. headgasket faillure
Re: Gogglebox's Garden Blog: The Temple of Light
You got the wrong king Rick, must of been King Tut not Elvis, he told meGoggleboxUK wrote:
That's genuine antique polycarbonite from the 2nd century BC, Elvis told me.
your getting your Memphis mixed up
Leigh
Re: Gogglebox's Garden Blog: The Temple of Light
Leigh wrote:You got the wrong king Rick, must of been King Tut not Elvis, he told meGoggleboxUK wrote:
That's genuine antique polycarbonite from the 2nd century BC, Elvis told me.
your getting your Memphis mixed up
Brilliant!
Re: Gogglebox's Garden Blog: The Temple of Light
lookin alright
if it where me i would have gone for real plants tilansias, aechmea, a nice monstera climbing up against the wall maybe even dyckia or ochagavia or even both
i saw some tiny broms for cheap last time i looked at my local nursery so there's no point complaining about the price
if it where me i would have gone for real plants tilansias, aechmea, a nice monstera climbing up against the wall maybe even dyckia or ochagavia or even both
i saw some tiny broms for cheap last time i looked at my local nursery so there's no point complaining about the price
Re: Gogglebox's Garden Blog: The Temple of Light
It wasn't the price of the plants Call, it was the price of creating suitable environments to plant them into.
For example, a floor level planter big enough to house a 7ft tall Monstera (in time) would have needed to take up approx 50cm cubed of space in the heatsink.
That cube would have to be supported on thick treated wooden stilts driven another foot into the ground at the base of the gravel heatsink then drainage tubes attatched and taken outside the gravel area to stop waterlogging and clogging from overspill.
Then the airducting would need to be routed around it creating staggered joints with shorter runs in betweeen thus reducing the efficiency of the airflow and possibly needing a higher powered fan which in turn would be more costly to run and noisier.
This rerouted airducting would then have the entry and exit points directly in the footfall area, the area where the 'arris end of a plant pot will be sat all winter.
Get it?
And that's nothing compared to the difficulty of planting at the tops of the structure, particularly around the areas where the electrics are routed.
For example, a floor level planter big enough to house a 7ft tall Monstera (in time) would have needed to take up approx 50cm cubed of space in the heatsink.
That cube would have to be supported on thick treated wooden stilts driven another foot into the ground at the base of the gravel heatsink then drainage tubes attatched and taken outside the gravel area to stop waterlogging and clogging from overspill.
Then the airducting would need to be routed around it creating staggered joints with shorter runs in betweeen thus reducing the efficiency of the airflow and possibly needing a higher powered fan which in turn would be more costly to run and noisier.
This rerouted airducting would then have the entry and exit points directly in the footfall area, the area where the 'arris end of a plant pot will be sat all winter.
Get it?
And that's nothing compared to the difficulty of planting at the tops of the structure, particularly around the areas where the electrics are routed.
Re: Gogglebox's Garden Blog: The Temple of Light
noGoggleboxUK wrote:It wasn't the price of the plants Call, it was the price of creating suitable environments to plant them into.
For example, a floor level planter big enough to house a 7ft tall Monstera (in time) would have needed to take up approx 50cm cubed of space in the heatsink.
That cube would have to be supported on thick treated wooden stilts driven another foot into the ground at the base of the gravel heatsink then drainage tubes attatched and taken outside the gravel area to stop waterlogging and clogging from overspill.
Then the airducting would need to be routed around it creating staggered joints with shorter runs in betweeen thus reducing the efficiency of the airflow and possibly needing a higher powered fan which in turn would be more costly to run and noisier.
This rerouted airducting would then have the entry and exit points directly in the footfall area, the area where the 'arris end of a plant pot will be sat all winter.
Get it? .
i dont know what your on about so lets make this simple
plants outside 4 summer inside 4 winter simples
cant you just stand it in its pot climbing up its moss stickamobob in a nice corner where you can see it well
Re: Gogglebox's Garden Blog: The Temple of Light
That would sort of detract from the idea of it being an old temple that has been reclaimed by nature.
"Ah, Doctor Livingstone I presume"
"No mate, I'm just the bloke who looks after the pot plants in the Valley of the Kings"
"Ah, Doctor Livingstone I presume"
"No mate, I'm just the bloke who looks after the pot plants in the Valley of the Kings"
Re: Gogglebox's Garden Blog: The Temple of Light
cant you hide the pots with something or make the pots look old
Re: Gogglebox's Garden Blog: The Temple of Light
Give it six weeks and it'll be full of bikes and a clothes line
Re: Gogglebox's Garden Blog: The Temple of Light
Funny you should mention 6 Flounderflounder wrote:Give it six weeks and it'll be full of bikes and a clothes line
Re: Gogglebox's Garden Blog: The Temple of Light
I was given the guided tour of the 'Temple of Light' today and can tell you it's better in real life than in the pictures!
Thanks for showing me around today and cheers for looking after my Circinalis, the Life size Lara Croft's we're awesome too.
Cheers fella!
Thanks for showing me around today and cheers for looking after my Circinalis, the Life size Lara Croft's we're awesome too.
Cheers fella!