1. Garden Tools
We bought a cordless lawnmower in June, £100 from Lidl without any batteries or charger. But I bought this model because I've ten (!) other cordless power tools in the same range and which all use the same batteries, so I've already four 4Ah & five 2Ah batteries, plus several chargers.
I'm impressed with this mower so far. It's lightweight and very easy to handle, and can cut all our three lawn areas twice on a single charge using the 4Ah batteries. It operates at twice the voltage of the other power tools in the range, and so takes two batteries to power it.
However, the petrol mower is still in the shed for now. Keeping the lawns tidy every week in the summer is a world away from hacking down long wet grass during the winter and early spring, and I don't yet know how the cordless mower will perform then.
The other garden tools I have in the same cordless range are a chainsaw, a standard hedge trimmer, a long extendable hedge trimmer and a pressure washer.
musings on simple living, gardening, personal finance plus my projects and experiments...
18 July 2020
01 July 2020
Investment Review - June 2020
Here's the combined portfolio summary sheet updated on 30 June :-
click on the graphic for a larger image ...
click on the graphic for a larger image ...
27 June 2020
Hedge gap in-filling by underplanting - Six on Saturday
Since we removed our old greenhouse, we've exposed a four-metre length of the old hawthorn hedge at the northern boundary.
Although it has quite healthy upper growth and is still making good shows of blossom and berries, this hedge is very old and spans the length of the boundary which we took over when we bought the slice of additional land to the west to extend our garden.
Amateurish attempts have been made in the past to 'lay' the hedge by partially cutting through some of the trunks and bending them over to the horizontal so they maintain a growing connection with the tree, but then sprout more upward branches to fill in the lower areas.
However, what with this poor quality laying and the lower part of the hedge being shaded by our old greenhouse for seven years, the base of the hawthorn hedge is very open and provides little or no low-level cover and wind protection to the garden now that the greenhouse has gone.
And hawthorn is deciduous, so it will be even worse during the winter months when there are no leaves on the upper branches.
Although winds from the north are not too common here, when they do arrive they're usually strong and very cold, so we thought we'd try to fill the lower gaps to protect the garden, and with a longer-term view of creating a full-height evergreen screen.
Although it has quite healthy upper growth and is still making good shows of blossom and berries, this hedge is very old and spans the length of the boundary which we took over when we bought the slice of additional land to the west to extend our garden.
Amateurish attempts have been made in the past to 'lay' the hedge by partially cutting through some of the trunks and bending them over to the horizontal so they maintain a growing connection with the tree, but then sprout more upward branches to fill in the lower areas.
However, what with this poor quality laying and the lower part of the hedge being shaded by our old greenhouse for seven years, the base of the hawthorn hedge is very open and provides little or no low-level cover and wind protection to the garden now that the greenhouse has gone.
And hawthorn is deciduous, so it will be even worse during the winter months when there are no leaves on the upper branches.
large gaps lowdown in the hedge behind the retaining wall (photo taken before we moved the fig tree here) |
Although winds from the north are not too common here, when they do arrive they're usually strong and very cold, so we thought we'd try to fill the lower gaps to protect the garden, and with a longer-term view of creating a full-height evergreen screen.
13 June 2020
Repairing a failed Double-glazed Window Unit
Our living room sealed double-glazed unit has failed. The sealing has been breached and allowed moist air to enter which has become trapped and resulted in mist patches and water droplets condensing on the inside faces of the glass panels.
Last year we also had a failure of a similar sealed double-glazed panel in our bedroom window. In this case, we ordered a new glazed unit from a manufacturer around 80 miles away, and picked it up ourselves in the back of the car. We then swapped it out with the failed panel, which we took to the local tip. The new panel was less than £100, so a reasonably cost-effective DIY repair.
However, this same process wasn't an option this time around because the failed window in the living room is much larger, so it wouldn't fit in the car and the manufacturer we used last time won't deliver so far from their base. Other online glaziers wanted ridiculous sums of money to manufacture a new unit to my dimensions, and anyway only a very few offered a delivery service.
We don't want to spend too much money on this window repair, because I think all the windows on the house will need replacing within the next few years anyway. They're at least thirty and maybe even forty years old.
So I decided to repair this failed window unit myself, or at least to improve its appearance, by trying to remove the trapped water from between the panels.
Assuming we don't break the glass, then the worst that can happen is the repair doesn't work, so it's definitely worth a try.
you'll need to look very closely to see the water droplets between the panes at the bottom, and the line of misting near the top... |
close-up of the bottom right corner ... |
and in the centre... |
Last year we also had a failure of a similar sealed double-glazed panel in our bedroom window. In this case, we ordered a new glazed unit from a manufacturer around 80 miles away, and picked it up ourselves in the back of the car. We then swapped it out with the failed panel, which we took to the local tip. The new panel was less than £100, so a reasonably cost-effective DIY repair.
However, this same process wasn't an option this time around because the failed window in the living room is much larger, so it wouldn't fit in the car and the manufacturer we used last time won't deliver so far from their base. Other online glaziers wanted ridiculous sums of money to manufacture a new unit to my dimensions, and anyway only a very few offered a delivery service.
We don't want to spend too much money on this window repair, because I think all the windows on the house will need replacing within the next few years anyway. They're at least thirty and maybe even forty years old.
So I decided to repair this failed window unit myself, or at least to improve its appearance, by trying to remove the trapped water from between the panels.
Assuming we don't break the glass, then the worst that can happen is the repair doesn't work, so it's definitely worth a try.
06 June 2020
30 May 2020
23 May 2020
Relocating the Fig Tree ... Six on Saturday
When we built our fig tree planter, we packed out the base
with layers of bricks to make an inner wall below the soil level, to confine
the tree roots. This is supposed to
improve fruiting.
However, when combined with the soil mix and a fig tree
that's grown considerably larger in the past three years, it also makes the
planter extremely heavy ! The weight hasn't been
a problem until now, because we've never tried to move it more than a few feet,
and then we just skidded it around on its base.
But this week we decided to relocate this planter to the new
paved area at the front corner of the garden, created when we demolished the old
greenhouse. This new spot gets much more sun
throughout the course of the whole day, although it's not quite as warm as the
old location which is a semi-enclosed sun trap formed by the kitchen wall,
workshop extension wall and the boundary fence at the east.
old location, sheltered and very warm, but only a few hours of direct sunlight each day |
So, how to move this very large planter from outside the back door and around
to the new paved area, a distance of some 30 metres ?
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