Any lawn experts or worm charmers on here?

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Dave 123

Legendary Member
A dew switch? I like that. Once worked at a place where we had to drag hessian sheets accross the lawns for the dew.

Fairly sure I was stuck in a weird Victorian bad dream and I was some sort of under paid peasant.

Nothing’s changed.


If I had £1 for every time I was asked what it was and what I was doing with it I'd be able to buy a carbon tandem!
 

green1

Über Member
Use a fertiliser with a high iron content, certainly seems to have greatly reduced the amount of wormcasts on our cricket square since I switched to it 3 or 4 years ago
 
[QUOTE 4991204, member: 9609"]without worms your garden would probably die. They are truly wondrous creatures, ...[/quote]
Yup. Charles Darwin's OTHER important book ... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Formation_of_Vegetable_Mould_through_the_Action_of_Worms

[QUOTE 4991204, member: 9609"]Just a thought and I don't know the answer to this - would we even have soil without worms ? If worms had never existed how differant would our flora be?[/QUOTE]
Hmm - light years from being knowledgeable on this. But we certainly wouldn't have the deep, fertile soils we have in the UK without worms.*

Beasts, bugs, creepy crawlies, and slitheries are an important part of soil formation wherever in the world ... but I can't think I ever saw evidence of worms in the soils of Egypt, Yemen, or Senegal. Lots of other beasties, but not worms, I don't think.



* Except where intensive, chemical-based farming is killing off the worms and other good beasts, and therefore killing off the soil! :cursing:

Don't know how old you are, but I remember the last days of horse-ploughing? And the little grey Fergie drawing it's wee three-blade plough? Followed by skirls of wheeling lapwings, and wheels of skirling gulls ... all after the worm and other juicies just turned over. Wonderful sight and sound. Such a normal part of the turning of the seasons.

All gone. :sad::sad::sad: :cursing:

Now so many soils have been so degraded, as to be, effectively, dead concrete. There is no way on earth a wee grey Fergie (all of 20hp!) could plough the soils I see on my rides. Lord only knows what enormous power the giant John Deere tractors need to plough the "soil" these days.

"Britain has only 100 years harvests left in its farm soil."

Killing worms and other beasties ... kills the soil.
 

winjim

Straddle the line, discord and rhyme
My Axolotl said he'll have em :okay:


View attachment 377919
We went to visit a friend who has an axolotl. The next day, I had to check my daughter's bath water for axolotls. I have decided that the cutest thing in the world is probably a two year old saying the word "axolotl". </tediousparentinganecdote>
 
We went to visit a friend who has an axolotl. The next day, I had to check my daughter's bath water for axolotls.
was she hoping there would be no axolotls or that there would be some?
. I have decided that the cutest thing in the world is probably a two year old saying the word "axolotl".
Not compared with my five attempts to spell it before the spell checker stopped underlining it in red.
 

winjim

Straddle the line, discord and rhyme
was she hoping there would be no axolotls or that there would be some?
A bit of both I think. She was a bit frightened of the axolotl at my friend's house. She was also frightened of the garden - he literally has a jungle - but didn't seem to mind the eight foot crocodile.
 

Tin Pot

Guru
We went to visit a friend who has an axolotl. The next day, I had to check my daughter's bath water for axolotls. I have decided that the cutest thing in the world is probably a two year old saying the word "axolotl". </tediousparentinganecdote>
Have her big brother try to kill it with an atlatl.
 
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