GARDEN WILLOW FENCE
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Specifications:
willow fence
made of natural osier with fine craft
artistic,durable and easy to erect
for home&garden deco to make privacy
Product Description:
Willow fences and screens are made from vertical willow sticks tightly
woven together with galvanized steel wire. Willow fencing and screening
are suitable for an informal garden.Rapidly renewable natural bentwood
material like willow make wonderful fences for outdoor and indoor decoration,
our exclusive pre-build fences panels are designed to beautify your home garden
as well as practical well build fences with easy set up. Different styles and sizes
to suite your needs.
- Q: Where eXaCtly waS the garden of Eden located?
- north korea
- Q: I do have two compost piles set up but I fear that they will not be ready in time for the growing season. I was wondering if there was compost soil for sale somewhere online that wasn't too expensive, or if there is some kind of soil at a department store which isn't high in toxicities or nutrient deficient.
- Miracle Grow growing soil at a Walmart, Lowes, HomeDepot, is about as good as you will get. Cost to much to ship.
- Q: Where can I get some type of water mister for lawn and/or garden?
- seriously? you mean like something you find at any home/garden store?
- Q: I'm making mystical magical garden I'm looking for life like dragon statues does anyone know where I can find some?
- Search Ebay. The link below is simply a search for dragon statues, you can narrow it further if you like. Try the words outside, outdoor, large, cement, lifesize and such. Good luck. PeaceLove
- Q: What's a good zone 9 gardening book?
- Sunset has a great book out that covers several zones, icluding 9 (which I'm in). Cal. based.
- Q: I am designing an indoor garden. It will be located in a glass sunroom/conservatory. Unfortunately, most of the books about indoor gardening are about growing plants in pots. I want to create an ACTUAL indoor garden -- lavender, jasmine, ferns, irises -- planted in soil beds. What I want to know is:1. Whether there are any books or websites on the subject.2. Whether the plants I've mentioned would grow in good indoor conditions, and any other plant suggestions (preferably plants with flowers!)
- You do not say where you live,so you may need to do some of this research virtually: The Brooklyn Botanic Garden has had gardens under glass for decades (100yrs?) Also look at Longwood Gardens= also extensive indoor gardens for eons. Doris Duke's home -ditto check the butterfly house at the Baltimore Acquarium Also, there is a long tradition of indoor gardens in England- they grew everything and there are lots of books on these. As far as the plants you name, jasmine, ferns- absolutely no problem- they are in every glass house I've ever been The essentials for most lavenders is poor soil, relatively dry, lots of light. I have grown all of these indoors, just home garden- windowsill or plant lights The iris I grow are the tall bearded - delicious fragrance-like candy- I would think with enough light and dark, they should grow well. With flowers: name it: roses if you have the room or are willing to work at the pruning (we have grown roses in a bed i brick high on concrete!! The rose has thrived for 50 years! Lilies, marigolds, zinnias, cosmos, bulbs: hyacinth, daffodil, crocus etc IF you have a cold frame to give these a winter conditioning; salvias-the flowering decent kind, The list is virtually endless, depending on the climate conditions you are going to create: temperature, humidity, direction the space faces, number of hours of daily sun. One crucial factor is air circulation; a ceiling fan may be enough, depending on how much natural ventilation there is in the space. Also, consider using plant lights to help meet your light conditions if there is a plant you really want to grow that needs more that the available light. Catalog your conditions, and then compare these to the needs of plants you like Sites: the victory garden is reliable as will be your state cooperative extension assoc. {the spots you can't see on this response is me drooling over the opportunity you have. Hope you have a grand adventure.}
- Q: im waiting to go see a mobile home 3 bdr 2 bth
- Depends totally on the person who bought it originally Most people don't want them. Too much water each bath
- Q: I want to know who has Home gardens in US. Where can I get the same?
- You question is somewhat confusing, when you say get the same do you mean you want to buy fresh produce or you want to grow fresh produce in your own garden. If you want to make your own garden this link will provide you will instruction and photos.
- Q: Home & Garden Party or Home Interiors? Which would you prefer to shop with? & Why?
- If I had to choose one I would say Home Interiors I think the quality is just as good today as it was years ago. I like more of the product line. Personally I would only buy unusual items I haven't seen anywhere.
- Q: I am a believer in providing my own food for myself, but i am worried that in the future the pollen of GMO's will contaminate the crops i am growing at home? Is this a possibility?
- Yes, it is possible. In fact, there was a case a few years back where Monsanto was taking some farmers to court because their neighbors were growing GMO soy beans and Monsanto thought the others' soybeans may have been cross with their GMO soy beans. Since the farmers Monsanto took to court were saving seeds from their crop Monsanto claimed they were benefiting from their GMO work without paying for the benefit. In essence, the companies making GMO seeds can claim you owe them for using their product even if you did not know your crop had been crossed with their modified plants' pollen if you saved seeds to plant the following year. There are also some organic growers suing Monsanto for contaminating their organic and heirloom crops with GMO pollen as this would change their foods and seeds status, possibly (probably) making them unusable for their intended purpose. Personally, I hope they win and Monsanto has to pay such a large award they have to abandon their GMO projects entirely. Google 'Monsanto sues farmers' and read about the Canadian farmer they sued and the end result of the suit; it is very interesting. Good luck and enjoy!
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