Springtime is the time for planting garden seeds, for veg and flowers. Anita tends to get upset when I put seed trays on the wooden ledge of the conservatory window. Despite my best efforts with newspapers and cling film, the moisture always penetrates down to the wood, which means that some repair or maintenance is always needed when the seedlings eventually go outside.
If there's one thing that England does better than France (at least around here), it's garden centres. There's one near where I used to live, that used to be called Abbey Nurseries but has changed its name. I often go there for a browse when I'm in England, and this time I spotted a small greenhouse designed for seed trays. It has four shelves that take five trays each - plenty for me. At 50 quid, I bought it, well worth it for all the grief saved.
The frame comprises metal bars with plastic joiners; its not going to survive a hurricane, but it's in a sheltered place beside the house so it should be OK. The shelves are a lightweight metal grille, strong enough to hold seed trays or small pots, and the whole is covered in a ripstop plastic sheet that zips up. It is tied to the wall and will benefit from thermal intertia too. I assembled it without the help of the instructions that were hidden in the folds of the plastic cover, as I discovered later.
I have stapled the bottom of the front sheet to strips of wood to give it some weight and to ease the job of rolling it up - it can clip to the top bar for when it's too hot. It even has the first of the season's tomato seeds planted in it. Fingers crossed!
2 comments:
I love browsing around garden centres :-)
Resourceful, Mark, clever. Hoping no hurricanes come your way.
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