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Last year I was giving 10kg of courgettes away every week at work...

This year I don't think 1 of 7 plants have survived... Sad days
 
Last year I was giving 10kg of courgettes away every week at work...

This year I don't think 1 of 7 plants have survived... Sad days

My courgettes last year didn't want to get going, I think I had half a dozen out of 3 plants.

This year, all my courgette plants are producing loads of fruit and I've already picked a few.
 
It’s been tough going this year with the lack of rain, but I’ve put a fair bit of time into the front border. Really happy with the result. Added a few more lily’s this morning (the slugs took a couple out last year), along with some more bark following a hedge trim. The bark that has rotted down over the years has made some wonderful soil in the border too.

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The roses have slowed down a bit, but they should flower a few times again this year.

My clover project is going well too, the bees love it:

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And what was a dead corner has become a small wildlife haven over the last couple of years:

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One of the side borders has recovered well too after a big bush collapsed a couple of years ago leading me to have to cut it all back:

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I've never noticed bees sleeping in flowers before, but this year they are.
They're still there when I go to bed and gone in the morning..

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That's either a cabbage forming or Audrey II..

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And these really do taste as their name suggests..

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Can't say I'm a fan, so may pickle them and see what they're like.
 
Not sure if it's the right forum but does anyone have a recommendation for outdoor bulbs to go on a pergola? Preferably solar powered. Thanks
 
Bambi and her mother have pretty much moved into the garden permanently and we are trying to ascertain if this is a good thing or if we need to move them on..
Unless they're eating your prize plants I wouldn't worry about it, and if they are they're extremely difficult to keep out deer fencing is usually a 6 footer
 
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Unless they're eating your prize plants I wouldn't worry about it, and if they are they're extremely difficult to keep out deer fencing is usually a 6 footer
This is my current thought to just leave them be, and as you may be able to tell from the picture boundary/fencing to this part of the garden is pretty much none existent.
Though someone has said that deer don't like the scent of humans and so urinating where they enter may keep them out, and I don't need to ask my son twice to go have a garden wee! A backup plan should they start to cause havoc..
 
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After finishing the deck I had a section of ground I was needing to turf about 3m x 3m.

My elderly neighbour also needed some grass lifting, it wasn’t in the best condition but saved them having to get rid of it and I’m not fussy.

Think it’s settled in well with a bit of care, given how bad it looked at the start wasn’t sure if I was going to need to lift it.

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After finishing the deck I had a section of ground I was needing to turf about 3m x 3m.

My elderly neighbour also needed some grass lifting, it wasn’t in the best condition but saved them having to get rid of it and I’m not fussy.

Think it’s settled in well with a bit of care, given how bad it looked at the start wasn’t sure if I was going to need to lift it.

That'll do fine....grass is way more resilient than people think, once established, TBH.
 
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