This is a public-interest archive. Personal data is pseudonymized and retained under
GDPR Article 89.
[miniaturerockgardens] Re: [[miniaturerockgardens] Digest Number 14]
- To: m*@onelist.com
- Subject: [miniaturerockgardens] Re: [[miniaturerockgardens] Digest Number 14]
- From: T* C* <t*@netscape.net>
- Date: 29 Mar 99 21:31:13 PST
- List-Unsubscribe: <mailto:miniaturerockgardens-unsubscribe@ONElist.com>
From: Tim Chavez <timchavez@netscape.net>
Vickie, Don't do it, your making us hurt just thinking about that much work.
Placing the tires is going to take a phenomenal amount of work already, as
well as moving sand in and around them. Consider painting the front of them in
camaflage schemes with oil paint. Nothing will stick to a decaying old tire
for long, but its the fabrication time of all those troughs as well as their
weight that will stop you. I've been 5+ yrs building a 10 x 40 foot slope with
rocks in it, Tires will take a while to set too, you'll be tired of setting
them and soon. My guess is its best you don't discourage yourself with a
gargantuan task like that.
But keep up the ambitious spirit. I want to see the that garden and a picture
of your proud and happy face when you finish it.
Tim Chavez [semidisabled gardener in Wichita, Kansas z 6][I can walk ok unless
I have been gardening or lifting.]
Vickie wrote
Has anyone tried old tires...
____________________________________________________________________
Get your own FREE, personal Netscape WebMail account today at http://webmail.netscape.com.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Start a new hobby. Meet a new friend.
http://www.onelist.com
Onelist: The leading provider of free email list services
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The mountains in miniature -- create your own alpine scenes
Other Mailing lists |
Author Index |
Date Index |
Subject Index |
Thread Index