website for over 60s   February 2010
 Home
 Gardening & DIY
 Arrow
Personal Health
 Arrow
Food and Drink
 Arrow
Body Maintenance
 Arrow
Travel & Holidays
 Arrow
Your Horoscope
 Arrow
Entertainment
 Arrow
Competitions
& Letters
 Chat and Socialise
 
ArrowCamera & Computer Tips
 ArrowCrafts & Hobbies

 
ArrowRetirement 
 ArrowBeauty & Hair Care

 
ArrowFashion & Accessories
 
ArrowPet Care
 Mobility
 
ArrowHome Comforts
 ArrowMoney Savers
 ArrowNews & Book Reviews
 ArrowValentine's Day

 Our Friends

 

Sixtyplusurfers Competition

Win an Electric
Propagator
  

 Gardening celebrity

To protect your plants from the
cold weather 

    Just tell us the name of this famous gardener?

     a) Alan Titchmarsh
    b) Monty Don
    c) Percy Thrower
    d) Diarmuid Gavin

                What you will win!

    Win an Electric Propagator

     Electric propagator   

Sixtyplusurfers has teamed up with The Stewart Company to offer one lucky reader the chance to win a Heat & Grow Thermostatic Control Electric Propagator to help shield your plants from hazardous cold drafts, frosts, and unexpected drops in temperature.

If you’re serious about cultivating any type of plant, seed or cutting inside your home or greenhouse, a propagator is the must-have accessory for helping things along.

The Stewart 38 cm Heat & Grow Thermostatic Control Electric Propagator will shield your plants from all those hazardous cold drafts, frosts and unexpected drops in temperature. It is a fantastic prize.

    Propagator with electric plug

Normally priced at just £24.99, your Heat & Grow Thermostatic Control Electric Propagator will maintain a steady temperature between  18°C - 23°C, and comes complete with:

·  1 half seed tray
·   6 flower pots
·   An 8-Watt heater
·   Guide to Successful Propagation booklet

To find your nearest stockist of the Stewart range of electric propagators and other products for the discerning gardener, visit:                            www.stewartcompany.co.uk
 email us at: 
info@stewartcompany.co.uk
or call Customer Services on 0208 603 5700.

Stewart was established more than 64 years ago, and is now a leading player in the gardening industry. It supplies products including growing trays, planters, propagation equipment, watering products, decorative planters and its groundbreaking 100% biodegradable plastic Bio Flowerpots to garden centres including Wyevale, Dobbies, Wilkinson and Homebase.

To Enter the Competition

Tell us the name of the famous gardener pictured at the top of this competition. Then send in your answer, together with your full name, postal address and telephone number by clicking on the Sixtyplusurfers link below:
sixtyplusurfers@hotmail.co.uk

* This competition is open to our
UK visitors only

    Jobs In The Garden
Patio plants

On the patio
 

Pot up dahlia tubers - Stop pots from freezing - raise them on bricks or pot feet. Wrap in bubble plastic and keep in a sheltered spot.

Under glass - Pot up stored dahlia tubers into trays or individual pots of compost in February. Grow them on in a warm location.

What to sow
· Slow-growing bedding such as antirrhinum, begonia, gazania, lobelia and pelargonium, and perennials and grasses to flower this year

·  Hardy annuals - sow in small pots or modular trays for planting out in spring.

·   Sweet peas

·
Veg that is slow to germinate such as chillies and sweet peppers. Sow in a heated greenhouse or propagator (wait for March otherwise). You can also start sowing tomatoes.
 

Fruit and veg- Plant new rhubarb crowns in February in well-cultivated soil and mulch with strawy manure. Sow broad beans and peas directly into the ground from mid- to late February. They’ll be ready to harvest in early summer. Feed them by adding a little fish, blood and bone fertiliser to the soil before you sow. 

 Draining and Bleeding
            Radiators 
  bleeding a radiator

How to bleed and drain your central heating system and radiators and avoid any mess. 

Sometimes air can enter a central heating system. This usually happens when new water is added from either the feed and expansion tank or simply when its topped up as a result of de furring or periodic maintenance. Air can also be created in a central heating system by the blades of the heating pump spinning round.  The usual remedy is to bleed your radiators or in some cases drain them.

So you may need to bleed your radiators if not completely remove them and drain them.  The 
Draineasy kit is a wonderful new innovation which can make this operation as simple as it can possibly be without the usual dribbles of dirty water on the carpet.Bleeding and draining radiators can be a very awkward and messy task but the Draineasy kit makes the operation so simple. Radiators should not be bled or removed with the heating on. If there is any air in the system it will rise to the top of the radiator. On one side of the radiator there is a small square plug called a bleed valve. You will need a special key to fit this bleed valve and it can be bought from the tools area below. 

Turn the key anti-clockwise about a quarter of a turn and (if there is air in the radiator) you will hear a hissing sound as it escapes. As soon as the hissing stops a dribble of water will escape from the radiator. At this point close the key very firmly. The radiator is now bled.

If bleeding the radiators does not solve the problem you are having with your central heating it may be that you need to remove and flush out and drain the radiators. Radiator sludge produced from rust and debris in the water supply can grind central heating systems to a standstill. Use the following instructions to drain and remove your radiators without mess. Make sure this kit is to hand.

Identify the feed and return valves on your radiator and close them down fully. Slacken the bleed valve (described above) to remove any pressure, then re-tighten. Position the draining tray under the valve you intend to undo. Select the correct size of Diverting collar for the radiator pipe (8mm, 10mm, 15 or 22mm) and apply a bead of sealing gel round the circular hole in the collar.

Clip the Diverting collar around the pipe and slide a length of sealing strip along the slit at the rear of the collar. This seals the back of the collar. Twist the Diverting collar through 90 degrees positioning the sealing strip at the rear. Smear the sealing gel around the pipe with your finger to make a fully water resistant seal.Once the collar and tray are in position and the surrounding area protected (just in case!) hold the valve tightly with one spanner while you undo the union nut to the radiator with another.

Water will begin to flow from the radiator. Should the water slow down do not undo the union nut any more. Open the bleed valve a little to let some air in, this will allow the water to flow out more easily. Do not undo the union nut or remove the bleed screw totally until the radiator is completely empty.The union may be re-tightened at any time during this process.
Available from:
The Draineasy kit is available from B&Q

 

         Gardening & DIY


In Praise Of Good Companions  
 

vegetables grown with companion planting
 Vegetables grown together with companion planting
  in mind at the RHS Garden at Great Torrington, Devon

Mix and match in your garden borders, says Michael Littlewood – companion planting brings a host of benefits.


Mixing flowers and herbs with fruit and vegetables is one of the cornerstones of companion planting. It has been practised by gardeners for centuries, and has increased in popularity as organic growing methods have become more well-known. It also looks wonderful, whatever style of edible garden you favour, whether it be the traditional cottage garden or the formal potager. 

Companion planting is a natural and highly expedient method of cultivation involving the grouping together of plants that make good neighbours. It avoids monoculture in favour of working in harmony with nature.

Having a mixed natural growing system provides greater biodiversity, which in turn creates much more stability and resilience in the face of changing conditions.

In nature, plants grow in close communities with a number of different species existing side by side – unlike the rigid rows of single crops found in many vegetable gardens – and companion planting can provide specific benefits to vegetables, fruits, herbs and ornamentals.

The benefits start with the natural control of pests and diseases. Many flowering plants – most members of the daisy family, for instance – will attract predatory insects such as hoverflies and ladybirds, both of which will consume aphids.

The odour produced by certain plants can deter many pests, such as whiteflies and aphids. Odoriferous plants, including those with aromatic oils, can play an important part in determining which insects visit the garden. For example, hemp can be used to repel the cabbage white butterfly. Other strongly scented plants, such as sweet basil, lemon balm, thyme and mint, work by simply confusing pests, many of which are lured to their target by scent alone.

The right choice of companion plant can also help to control competing plants. Many species of plant can reduce competition by effectively poisoning any other plants that try to grow nearby, so that they remain the dominant species.

The walnut tree is a good example; it produces the poisonous chemical juglone and is therefore not threatened by any competing vegetation, including its own seedlings. Mexican marigold Tagetes minuta makes an excellent companion plant; its root secretions can assist in killing ground elder and bindweed and it is also effective in nematode control.

  nasturtiums

    Nasturtiums  protect apple trees from the attentions
                               of woolly aphids

Some companion plants can greatly assist in improving the soil. For example, flax will break up a clay soil. Mustard produces alkaline secretions from its roots and can be used as a green manure or cover crop to prepare an acid soil for a subsequent crop which prefers alkaline conditions.

 Many plants in the legume family, such as peas, beans and clovers, possess the ability to “fix” nitrogen from the atmosphere for their own and neighbours’ use. What is not used is left in the soil for the benefit of subsequent crops. The addition of clover to grass mixtures is an old farming practice. Clover can also be interplanted amongst sweetcorn, which will benefit from the clover as a ground cover. The clover can be left after the corn has been harvested to protect the soil during the winter. In the spring it can be dug into the ground, where its nutrients will be released to feed other plants. 

Planting insect-attracting companion plants among your crops will improve pollination. Bees love the fragrance of herbs such as lemon balm, thyme, sweet basil, mint, summer savory, flowering parsley and many more. If you plant any of these near vegetable crops which depend on a good rate of pollination, such as beans, it will help to ensure that the flowers “set” and produce a good crop.

Growing a mixture of plants together helps to create a diverse habitat capable of supporting a wide range of insects. These in turn will prey on the more common pests. Growing a range of flowering “attractant” plants will encourage ladybirds, hoverflies, lacewings and other beneficial insects. This will achieve a reduction in crop damage and allow you to eliminate pesticide use. 

Companion plants can also act as sacrificial crops. The idea is to grow certain plants to attract insect pests so that they leave your crop plants alone. For example, aphids prefer nasturtiums to other plants. However, this is a risky undertaking as insect populations tend to rise in response to the available food supply. Once their favourite plants are exhausted, they will then move on to other plants – so it is important to ensure a continuous supply of the sacrificial plants. 

Another role that companion plants can play is that of “nurse” crops. Many plants require protection from wind and excessive sunshine. There are many edible plants that can provide this, like Jerusalem artichokes, which can grow to two metres tall. Some plants can provide one another with mutually beneficial physical conditions. For instance,  pumpkins or courgettes can keep the ground moist and shaded, which suits sweetcorn, while the pumpkins or courgettes appreciate the support and partial shade provided by the corn. Native Americans always grew beans, squash and sweetcorn together – these were known as the “three sisters”. The dense prickly squash leaves deter animal invaders; the corn offers the beans the support they require; and the beans repay this by fixing nitrogen in the soil for all three plants.  

It is not always clear why specific instances of companion planting work. Some are not (and may never be) scientifically proven – but it is a fact that this method of gardening produces happier plants and provides better insect control than monoculture. Companion planting can be worked into any style of edible gardening, whether it is the informality of the cottage garden, with its riotous bevy of intermingled fruit, flowers, herbs and vegetables, or the formality of the traditional vegetable garden, where rows of vegetables can be separated by strips of companion herbs, or surrounded by flowers.

 Do not get bogged down in the myriad possibilities of companion planting. Simply growing a wide range of plants, both edible and non-edible, is the best method for the health of the whole garden, as it helps to provide a diverse habitat for a wide range of insects, both good and bad. Chances are the natural system will then sort it all out! 

Monoculture, as practised in intensive commercial gardens, on farms, and in many non-organic private gardens, creates a pest and disease paradise, and in the absence of any natural predators, growers reach for the spray gun. A garden buzzing with bees, butterflies and insects feels alive in a way that a pesticide-controlled plot of land never can. So go and enjoy seeing your companions hard at work on your behalf in your garden, and listen to nature all around you.  

Biog: Michael Littlewood is a landscape designer and the author of many gardening publications including The Organic Gardener’s Handbook. 

Special offer:
Companion Planting Chart

Michael Littlewood’s beautifully illustrated full-colour charts, guides and calendars provide a wealth of information for your gardening year – and they make perfect gifts for any keen gardener. All are produced by an environmentally friendly printing process, using paper from sustainable sources, and are packed in biodegradable tubes.

The Companion Planting Chart provides quick and easy reference to 108 varieties of vegetables, fruits and herbs, showing which plants are beneficial and which are antagonistic when grown together. The print size allows all the names to be easily read when it is hanging on the kitchen or garden shed wall. On the reverse is information about the many advantages of companion planting, helping you to work in harmony with nature and save money too. Both sides have a wipe-clean surface.

Size: 72 x 52cm (28.5 x 20.5in). Only £12.75 including P&P

Also available: Vegetable Growing Guide, Vegetable Planning Chart, Gardener’s Monthly Reminder Calendar, Gardening By The Moon Calendar, Seasonal Availability Calendar. 

To order
Visit www.ecodesignscape.co.uk
 or call 01460 75515.
 

Start 2010 By Planning
     A Vegetable Garden

 Grow Veg

More and more people are including fruit and vegetables in their gardens as they experience the superior taste and health benefits of home grown food.

But growing vegetables has traditionally needed more experience than picking out plants from a garden centre. Many crops need to be grown from seed, spaced correctly and ‘rotated’ in groups to prevent the build-up of pests or loss of soil nutrients.

GrowVeg.com simplifies the planning of a vegetable garden or allotment by making it easy to work out what to plant, where to plant it and when to do so. The website enables the gardener to build a personalised interactive plan of their garden using the unique online Garden Planner software.

 Grow Veg software

Gardeners simply sketch out their growing space, then add vegetables to it by clicking and dropping them onto the area.

An intuitive colour-coded circle around each plant shows how much space it requires and which crops to keep together. Plants can easily be rearranged by dragging them into another location until the perfect layout is achieved.

Once the vegetable patch is planned GrowVeg.com will send email reminders twice a month listing which vegetables need sowing or planting out. A complete list of plants and their spacing can quickly be printed giving a useful summary of what to buy, when to plant and when to harvest.


In addition to the interactive Garden Planning software, the site has a number of expert GrowGuide articles on everything from keeping your plants pest-free to gardening with children. GrowVeg.com offers a free 30-day trial of the Garden Planning software together with all the features of the site. New features are continually being added such as the ability to add garden notes and vegetable varieties.

 

Sixtyplusurfers Giveaway 

Freezing Conditions   Put Wild Birds in Peril

Bird on birch log

   Tips and advice from CJ Wildlife on how to help our feathered friends cope

Sixtyplusurfers has teamed up with CJ Wildlife to offer all of our readers the chance to receive a FREE Handbook of Garden Wildlife. They are also offering some helpful advice on helping our feathered friends in the cold weather.

After the warmest November since 2003 and the coldest December since 1996, most of the UK now finds itself caught in a New Year big freeze which is seeing prolonged and severe snow cover, ice and sub-zero temperatures across the country.

The relentless cold is causing problems and disruptions up and down the UK and with the temperature set to stay below freezing in many areas well into January, it is likely the snow and frozen ground will be around for some time yet.

It is during these unusual periods of severe weather when wild birds become most reliant on the supplementary foods we put in our gardens. Like us, they are not used to having to cope with such low temperatures over a prolonged period of time and the need for nutritious, easy to find, high energy food will increase every day whilst the wintry weather remains. 

Bird on bird-feeder

Catering for this increasing demand for food can be a life saver for your regular garden visitors. Any additional food will be welcomed but high energy fat cakes and suet balls are the most efficient and effective way to offer high energy, high calorie foods to your garden birds. Simply hang the products up, place them whole or chopped on the ground, or rub them into bark for more retiring species.

 

Having some extra food on standby for when the winter weather arrives in full force can mean the difference between life and death for wild birds. Being able to find food quickly which they can consume with minimal effort is the key to winter survival.

 

Based on CJs Five Step Guide to Garden Bird Care, featured in their Handbook of Garden Wildlife 2009/10, the following tips will help you to help the birds in your garden as the big freeze continues this weekend:

 Bird eating bird seeds
 

Step 1 – Food

Make sure you don’t run out of bird food this winter. Once you begin feeding regularly, your visitors will come to rely on the food – so be reliable and check that the foods you are offering are nutritious and high in essential fat.
 

Step 2 – Feeders

Keep feeders clean and topped up and if you don’t have a bird table think about getting one. When it freezes, ground-feeding birds such as blackbirds and robins can have trouble finding food and will be grateful of a well stocked table!

 

Step 3 – Nest Boxes

Putting up a nest box now not only increases the chance of them being used as nest sites in the spring, but they can also be used as roosting sites where birds will take shelter from the bitterly cold wind and snow.
 

Step 4 – Bird Bath

A frozen bird bath may as well be an empty bird bath! Defrost baths as early in the morning as possible to reduce disturbing crucial feeding times and use warm water or Ice Free, ensuring that any water additives you use are 100% wildlife friendly.
 

Step 5 – Hygiene

An increase in activity at your feeders and bird bath will require a little extra vigilance on your part to make sure that feeding areas are kept clear of droppings and any uneaten food. As with replenishing feeders and water baths, cleaning should be done last thing at night or first thing in the morning so as not to disturb feeding birds.

Receive a Free Handbook of Garden Wildlife from CJ Wildlife

 

CJ Wildlife Handbook
 

To receive a free copy of our Handbook of Garden Wildlife (packed with tips, advice and articles along with our complete range of products) call freephone 0800 731 2820 and quote code C0879, or click on www.birdfood.co.uk
 

    


And remember, providing for your garden birds can be as pleasurable for you as it is essential for them.  The reward of seeing a winter robin or tiny wren feeding on a fully stocked feeder on a frozen winter morning can be enough to get you hooked on bird feeding forever!

 

    Action for February

pruning apple tree

  Top three must-do jobs in the garden
                      this month

Cut back grasses 

Cut back old stems, but don’t damage new foliage.
 

As we saw in the 2009 Chelsea Flower show, deciduous grasses are becoming more and more popular. If you’ve planted some of these versatile, wildlife-attracting plants in your garden, now’s the time to trim them back. 

The dead leaves and stalks will have formed an ideal shelter for wildlife over winter but you need to cut them back now so you can let new fresh growth come forth for spring.

Cut back the old growth with secateurs at the base and avoid any new growth you see coming through.

Keep an eye on your lawn 

cutting the lawn

Our increasingly unpredictable climate means we can get mild periods of weather even in the depths of winter. Grass is quick to respond to this mildness and puts on lush growth. 

As long as the ground isn’t wet or frozen, it’s a good idea to cut the grass, no matter how early in the year. It’ll keep your lawn looking tidy and avoids the grass getting long and difficult to cut.
 

Don’t leave grass cuttings lying on the lawn – it’s too cold and damp to allow decomposition. Collect cuttings and add them to the compost heap or put them in your green waste bin if your council provides one.

A quick way to improve the appearance of your lawn is to redefine its edges using a half-moon edging tool. Compost the trimmings.

Last chance to prune apple and pear trees

         pruning apple tree

You need to have pruned your apple and pear trees by the end of February. If you don’t, your harvest may not as be as good because older branches won’t bear as much fruit as newer, fresh, healthy branches. This pruning is only for open apple trees though, not espaliers, cordons or fan-trained apples (you should prune these in July and August). When you're pruning, bear in mind that you want to let light and air into the branches and prune to form the tree into a goblet shape.