I promise you all: "low maintenance managwement" really was the term being applied to new cost-cutting, ecofriendly landscape contracts when I was studying horticulture in the 1990s, not my term! I had to stifle a giggle when the lecturer introduced it: not a flicker of a smile passed the lips of any of the other students - a very serious-minded group.
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marthe
S-A, I'd never heard this term though I've spent many years in the green (hort) industry. It must go by another name over here. Here, most folks of means hire landscaping crews (Mow, Blow, Go) to install and maintain their gardens. There is a standard "groomed" look that homeowners desire for their gardens/landscapes. This includes well maintained lawns (watered, fed, mowed, raked), trimmed shrubbery, herbaceous borders with a mix of annuals and perennials carefully selected to show "color" from spring to fall. Beds are all mulched and scrupulously weeded. The very grand estates here still have estate gardeners, including a head gardener and what used to be called, garden boys (though they are often women nowadays.) In the late 19th cent., it was fashionable to have a Scottish or English head gardener.
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amateur51
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and again today amateur51!
the sunshine accompanied by a modest pension increase ... what must i have done wrong? .... this can not last .... is there after all, reason to live?
the brillig of the sky and sunlight today is more than enough to stir this cadaver past the anticipation of hip agonies ... .... oh the perils of a jazbo life ehAccording to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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without wishing to steal S_A's thunder i do believe it is the equinox today ... we are upright and untilted until tomorrow when the darkness shortens and the light increases i find the beginning of spring a far more celebratory marker than any birthday in that i am always glad to have made it to another one ....According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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Originally posted by salymap View PostYes I am lucky to have a spring birthday so both the 'markers' come near each other. I am definitely a daylight person, as Doris Day once aptly said.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostWhat's not good news is that the expected (by me) heat on Friday is now off. I hadn't predicted the high that's leaving us high and dry would move north, shifting the wind around so that instead of coming up from the direction of Sapin, it will be approaching from across a still-cold North Sea. Still no end in sight of this dry weather. When it does come - as inevitably it must, my guess is it will be one helluva breakdown. I can see the Atlantic lows, just queuing up with their associated rain-bearing fronts, ready to pounce!
So am I going to get wet on my bike on Friday, o wise one?
Or will it be a cosy Saturday afternoon in front of a b&w movie with the rain lashing down outside?
(On the subject of equinoxes etc, has the recent BBC series "Orbit" been mentioned on this thread? Excellent, I think )"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Caliban View Post
So am I going to get wet on my bike on Friday, o wise one?
Or will it be a cosy Saturday afternoon in front of a b&w movie with the rain lashing down outside?
(On the subject of equinoxes etc, has the recent BBC series "Orbit" been mentioned on this thread? Excellent, I think )
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Anna
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostAs dry as Wales on a 1960s dirty weekend, Caliban.
Incidentally S_A, Oh Oracle and Grand Soothsayer and Purveyor of Isobars - any idea if it'll be wet on Tuesday on East Sussex coast? I shall be attending an outdoor event on that day.
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Originally posted by Anna View PostAhem. To those who do not know. S_A is not saying the Welsh do not know how to have a dirty weekend but is alluding to the fact that from 1881 you could not obtain an alcoholic drink in Wales on the Sabbath. The first referendum to repeal this law was in 1961, the last 'dry' part of Wales to go 'wet' was in 1993 I think.
Incidentally S_A, Oh Oracle and Grand Soothsayer and Purveyor of Isobars - any idea if it'll be wet on Tuesday on East Sussex coast? I shall be attending an outdoor event on that day.
Next Tuesday's a bit far off I'm afraid. Some butterfly could meanwhile beat its wings in Patagonia, and that.
The jazz singer Norma Winstone once had an album titled "Manhattan in the Rain" reviewed in The Times; the article, mentioning that Ms Winstone was in the habit of often singing about the weather, was headed "Propping up the Isobars".
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