Not really a garden thing...One of the things I dislike about my back yard is how uneven it is..not hilly, just full of little "pot holes" for lack of a better term. It would be real easy for one to roll an ankle if you're not paying attention. I wondered if anyone else has dealt with this. Sounds like just raking in an asspot of soil might do the job, per the video below..but would prefer to hear the technique works before perusing that option. I've got a pretty good-sized yard..and this sounds like it could be a big job, especially if I have to do it twice, as this guy suggests.
You can either fill in the holes or raze the hills. Seems filling holes would be easier.
(03-15-2013, 07:12 PM)aussiefriend Wrote: You see Duchess, I have set up a thread to discuss something and this troll is behaving just like Riotgear did.
No hills.. just holes...valleys...ruts...they all have grass in them. I also worry about having an entire backyard covered with dirt...and the mess it could be for the dog after watering.
Of the millions of sperm injected into your mother's pussy, you were the quickest?
You are no longer in the womb, friend. The competition is tougher out here.
(05-12-2011, 05:40 PM)thekid65 Wrote: I also worry about having an entire backyard covered with dirt.
You'll be so glad you did...seriously. You can have a mess for a short period of time or you can have your lil' holes indefinitely. The time is going to pass either way.
So you've tried this method (or seen it done), and it's effective, Duchess? I agree, the mess would well worth the hassle in order to have a nicer yard. I also though about doing it towards the end of summer, after I stop mowing (that was my other worry..how the hell to effectively mow,,or if I even needed to) and watering, in order to minimize the mess..but wondered if I'd do harm to the grass.
Of the millions of sperm injected into your mother's pussy, you were the quickest?
You are no longer in the womb, friend. The competition is tougher out here.
Dirt won't harm your grass as long as it's evenly raked & the grass is not covered by gobs of your dirt. You don't want a lot of activity on your yard when your trying to get your seed started. Fall might work best for you & can buy seed for that season.
Find someone who is digging a swimming pool and see if they will give you the topsoil
with the grass attached before the digger comes in.
It is pretty easy to remove and you can fit the pieces in like a puzzle .... fewer steps,
and you can choose your grass. Just a suggestion; we did it once to several spots and
most took right away.
(05-12-2011, 07:32 PM)thekid65 Wrote: Meh, I didnt want to do any tilling at all...that would be a huge job. Just want to level out all the holes, nooks and crannies.
A nice big tractor could do an acre in a day, that includes grooming. But stay away from any roots, just cover them. Lay a cover of cowshit before turning it and you will be putting by spring. I'm not the type to care about my lawn much though but it should be done every 20 yrs or so. Just to let the ground breathe again.
Brown stink bugs are causing millions of dollars in crop damage, with the apple industry being hit the hardest.
Growers in the mid-Atlantic region have reported the worst problems with about 18 per cent of the crop ruined.
The industry has reported $37million in damage to apple growers in Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia this spring.
The brown marmorated stink bug - or Halyomorpha halys - is not native to the U.S.
First found in Allentown, Pennsylvania, in 1998, it is believed to have been introduced into the east of the state a few years earlier.
While not dangerous, it is clear when a stink bug is around due to the appalling smell it emits when squashed or crushed.
The insect does not transmit disease and is not poisonous, but can bite humans. It also likes to eat plants and vegetables. Irritatingly, the stink bug is extremely difficult to catch as it can simply fly away.
Coming from the insect family Pentatomidae, it is well known as an agricultural pest in its native habitat of China, Japan, Korea and Taiwan.
In recent years it has feasted on crops on islands in the mid-Atlantic and is now feared to become a regular feature in the U.S. in summers to come, although it sometimes surfaces during sunny winter days.
Its scent glands, which are found on the dorsal surface of the abdomen and underside of the thorax, are responsible for its repulsive stink.
It typically lays yellow or yellow/red eggs on the underside of leaves in batches of 20 to 30.
The bug, a three-quarter-inch invader native to Asia, has a huge appetite and has no domestic natural predators.
The bug began appearing in mid-Atlantic orchards in 2003-04 and exploded in number last year.
They have now been seen in 33 states, including every one east of the Mississippi River and as far west as California, Oregon and Washington.
Research entomologist Tracy Leskey, who works at the U.S. Agriculture Department's Appalachian Fruit Research Station in Kearneysville, West Virginia, said: 'All that we do know for certain is that a tremendously large population went into overwintering in fall 2010.
'So, if they survived, there could be a very large population emerging.'
Mark Seetin, the association's director of regulatory and industry affairs, called it the worst threat to farmers he's see in his 40 years in agriculture.
America's biggest apple producer, Washington state, has yet to report serious so far.
Aside from apples, the bug, named for the foul smell it gives off when crushed, will feed on nearly anything, including cherries, tomatoes, grapes, lima beans, soybeans, green peppers and peaches.
It uses a needle-like mouth to pierce the skin of its host fruit or vegetable, leaving behind a spot that is disfigured and discolored.
Stink bugs wiped out up to 40 per cent of Tom Haas's peaches last season at his Cherry Hill Orchards in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
Mr Haas, the owner of the family-run orchard, said: 'This is the worst, probably, that I've dealt with in 25 years. The damage they do to fruit is horrendous.'
At Catoctin Mountain Orchard, about ten miles south of the Maryland-Pennsylvania line, owner Robert Black said he did not realise how bad the stink bug damage was until his apples ripened.
He said: 'My late varieties of Pink Ladies is what really took the damage. We had a 50 percent damage there.'
Federal researchers have set up devices in Black's operation and in eight other commercial orchards in Maryland and West Virginia to monitor the bugs, the Associated Press reports.
Other scientists from North Carolina to New York are scrambling to fight back against the pests.
Rep. Roscoe Bartlett, from Maryland, started demanding federal action last year after hearing from orchard growers in his western Maryland district.
He said: 'If I was a mad scientist doing gene splicing and putting together a bug that would really be nasty and I was turning it loose on my enemy, I probably couldn't do a better job.
'One might define this thing as the bug from hell."
Researchers are considering long-term solutions, such as finding chemicals that can attract stink bugs to traps before they can feed on fruit — a strategy that has worked in controlling Japanese beetles.
Scientists are also looking at importing the stink bug's main Asian predator, the parasitic wasp, though that work could take years to ensure the wasps wouldn't cause their own set of problems.
For growers seeking immediate help, the best hope is an insecticide called dinotefuran, the active ingredient in the commercial products Venom and Scorpion.
my buddy waiting at kitchen door. i had to take photo through glass and screen, so it's not really sharp. he looked at me so pitifully, he was obviously starving. hahaha
a neighbor's wisteria. lovely~~lots of dogwood and lilacs blooming around here, i love them too. lilacs and hydrangea are my favorites. anyone have some hydrangea?
Finally started planting the veggie/flower garden this week. Got tomatoes/carrots/radishes/cukes/watermelon in the ground. Was very surprised that some potatoes we had planted last year sprouted!
Gotta till the upper half of the garden today so the wifey can plant corn and flowers this weekend. Will post pics when it's all said and done. Defo gonna do a better job with the watering system this year..that damned drip line just didnt cut the mustard.
Of the millions of sperm injected into your mother's pussy, you were the quickest?
You are no longer in the womb, friend. The competition is tougher out here.
Duchess my dear, your post #179 is so pretty! The plants behind your 'candytuft', what is that called? It looks familiar and is it full size in the pic. I want something like that for a backdrop but i don't want it to get any bigger and just not wanting the usual hedges everyone around here uses.
(05-29-2011, 09:56 AM)melissab Wrote: Duchess my dear, your post #179 is so pretty! The plants behind your 'candytuft', what is that called?
Those aren't my plants in the post you referred to but I'm pretty sure the plants behind the candy tuft are daylilies, probably Stella D'oro. They come in a variety of colors with yellow being the most popular.