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Post by RitaMarita on May 3, 2016 7:59:19 GMT -5
I thought that it would be neat to have a thread for everyone to share ideas. The middle picture is of our food garden with the netting on our blueberry bushes. The other two are of my flower garden that I started last year, with the walkway in the back.
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Post by Voxxkowalski on May 3, 2016 8:13:30 GMT -5
Very nice...looks so peaceful.
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Post by RitaMarita on May 3, 2016 8:22:10 GMT -5
Very nice...looks so peaceful. Thanks! That is the goal... The farm can be so crazily busy that having a part that is more peaceful is my attempt to survive!
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Post by jen51 on May 3, 2016 11:35:38 GMT -5
Rita, your gardens look so nice! I'm trying not to be envious of your space in the country! We're currently living in town, so our space is limiting as far as a garden goes. Our yard is huge, but there are too many trees. We do pack a lot of food into a small area, though.
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Post by jen51 on May 3, 2016 12:13:04 GMT -5
I tried to post a few pics of some of our spring veggies from my camera, but it says the file is too large. Not sure how to fix that. Anyone?
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Deleted
Past Member
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on May 3, 2016 14:17:04 GMT -5
I tried to post a few pics of some of our spring veggies from my camera, but it says the file is too large. Not sure how to fix that. Anyone? your camera should have a setting where you can lower the resolution and then retake the pics.
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Post by Voxxkowalski on May 3, 2016 15:04:04 GMT -5
I tried to post a few pics of some of our spring veggies from my camera, but it says the file is too large. Not sure how to fix that. Anyone? your camera should have a setting where you can lower the resolution and then retake the pics. You could edit it on your PC with your photo viewing software.
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Post by Clotilde on May 3, 2016 18:20:01 GMT -5
This is my herb spiral, early-mid season last year. It was a really low budget project or I would have had nicer looking stones but it's great. A few things survived and are doing well this spring: lovage, sage, tarragon, thyme, echinacea, and chives. Not sure about the parsley yet.
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Post by Voxxkowalski on May 3, 2016 18:21:43 GMT -5
nice garden
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Post by Clotilde on May 3, 2016 18:22:37 GMT -5
lol did an upside down possum take the picture...LOL Is it upside down?
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Post by Voxxkowalski on May 3, 2016 18:25:43 GMT -5
lol did an upside down possum take the picture...LOL Is it upside down? yes! cant you see it?
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Post by Clotilde on May 3, 2016 18:36:36 GMT -5
It is appearing right side up for me.
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Post by Voxxkowalski on May 3, 2016 18:41:29 GMT -5
It is appearing right side up for me. lets talk on the chat box
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Post by RitaMarita on May 4, 2016 6:30:50 GMT -5
Rita, your gardens look so nice! I'm trying not to be envious of your space in the country! We're currently living in town, so our space is limiting as far as a garden goes. Our yard is huge, but there are too many trees. We do pack a lot of food into a small area, though. That is funny because sometimes I wish we had less space, because keeping everything up is a lot of work...
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Post by RitaMarita on May 4, 2016 6:32:09 GMT -5
This is my herb spiral, early-mid season last year. It was a really low budget project or I would have had nicer looking stones but it's great. A few things survived and are doing well this spring: lovage, sage, tarragon, thyme, echinacea, and chives. Not sure about the parsley yet. So pretty! I think that the stones you used are natural and country looking, and give it a nice sort of rustic look. We don't really have an herb garden. It must be nice to have!
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