Topic Topic - Plant Photo Galleries Topic - Wildlife on Plant Photo Gallery
Site design and content copyright ©April 2009 Chris Garnons-Williams. |
Ivydene Gardens Climber Plant Gallery:
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A Site Map can contain about 500 filenames before we run out of the page that is displayed. In order for this gallery to contain more than 500 plant names, I have created Plant ....: Pages in Alphabetical Order to contain the Link to the relevant Climber Plant Description Page in another Photo Gallery (at this time it is the Climbers Gallery and the Clematis Gallery) and to its Flower Thumbnail in each of the Months that it flowers in this Gallery. New Climber Photo Galleries will be created as needed. This Gallery will contain a Flower Photo of every Climber from the other Climber Galleries in all the Flower Colour Comparison Pages for the months that it flowers. Ramblers Scramblers & Twiners by Michael Jefferson-Brown (ISBN 0 - 7153 - 0942 - 0) describes how to choose, plant and nurture over 500 high-performance climbing plants and wall shrubs, so that more can be made of your garden if you think not just laterally on the ground but use the vertical support structures including the house as well. Warning - Just as it is a mistake to try to keep a tiger in a dog's kennel, it can be a disaster to plant a rampant grower in a site that it will very quickly outgrow. Strong climbers, especially self-supporting ones (Ivy, Ampelopsis, Parthenocissus and Vitis), can quickly get to the eaves, where they may sabotage gutters, and if allowed to get onto the roof, distort or even dislodge tiling. Climbing roses must be supported by humans tying them to structures since the roses cannot do it themselves ( keep the top of the structures 3 feet below the eaves so that annual pruning can reduce the risk of the odd stem reaching the guttering!!). |
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There are 3 sectors on a house wall or high wall:-
The climbers in this gallery have been placed into one of these 3 heights with the Text Box Boundary in:-
This Gallery splits the climbers into their following ways of climbing:-
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These are split into the following in the Comparison Pages (since the pages use a fixed template format, then if the Title of the Page has a White Background and its a Twiner you are looking for, the photos will be at the bottom of the page with blanks before it. A Page Title with a Green Background indicates an empty page) :-
This plant gallery has thumbnail pictures of climber flowers in the following colours per month:-
If you click on a thumbnail another window opens with 9 larger images (Flower, Foliage and Form - for Flower, Foliage and Form pages) and the following plant description:-
These gallery photographs were provided by Christine Foord and they were photographed by Christine and Ron Foord. |
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An Englishman is having breakfast, in Paris, one morning - coffee, croissants, bread, butter and jam when a Frenchman, chewing bubble-gum, sits down next to him. The Englishman ignores the Frenchman who, nevertheless, starts a conversation.
Frenchman: 'You English folk eat the whole bread?' Englishman : 'Of course.' Frenchman: (after blowing a huge bubble) 'We don't. In France , we only eat what's inside. The crusts we collect in a container, recycle it, transform them into croissants and sell them to England.' The Frenchman has a smirk on his face.
The Englishman listens in silence. The Frenchman persists: 'Do you eat jam with the bread?' Englishman: 'Of Course.' Frenchman: (cracking his bubble-gum between his teeth and chuckling). 'We don't. In France we eat fresh fruit for breakfast, then we put all the peels, seeds, and leftovers in containers, recycle them, transform them into jam, and sell the jam to England.'
After a moment of silence, The Englishman then asks: 'Do you have sex in France ?' Frenchman: 'Why of course we do', he says with a big smirk. Englishman: 'And what do you do with the condoms once you've used them?' Frenchman: 'We throw them away, of course.' Englishman: 'We don't. In England , we put them in a container, recycle them, melt them down into bubble-gum, and sell them to France.' |
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