Discussion:
collecting leaves from chipped slate
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Diane Epps
2004-10-30 04:44:13 UTC
Permalink
Does anyone have any bright ideas of how I can collect the leaves which have
fallen all over a large chipped slate area? Hand knees and elbow grease is
the method I have so far employed.
--
Never drive faster than your angel can fly
Franz Heymann
2004-10-30 06:45:44 UTC
Permalink
Post by Diane Epps
Does anyone have any bright ideas of how I can collect the leaves which have
fallen all over a large chipped slate area? Hand knees and elbow grease is
the method I have so far employed.
Try an electric garden blower/vac. It really does blow the leaves
into a corner where you can pick it up

Franz
Cerumen
2004-10-30 09:56:56 UTC
Permalink
Post by Diane Epps
Post by Diane Epps
Does anyone have any bright ideas of how I can collect the leaves
which have
Post by Diane Epps
fallen all over a large chipped slate area? Hand knees and elbow
grease is
Post by Diane Epps
the method I have so far employed.
Try an electric garden blower/vac. It really does blow the leaves
into a corner where you can pick it up
Certainly the wind around here, particularly recently, has kept my
gravelled areas totally free of fallen leaves. I guess if the chipped
slate was very small maybe a vacuum would lift them as well?


--

Chris Thomas
West Cork
Ireland
Franz Heymann
2004-10-30 13:11:30 UTC
Permalink
Post by Cerumen
Post by Diane Epps
Post by Diane Epps
Does anyone have any bright ideas of how I can collect the
leaves
Post by Cerumen
Post by Diane Epps
which have
Post by Diane Epps
fallen all over a large chipped slate area? Hand knees and elbow
grease is
Post by Diane Epps
the method I have so far employed.
Try an electric garden blower/vac. It really does blow the leaves
into a corner where you can pick it up
Certainly the wind around here, particularly recently, has kept my
gravelled areas totally free of fallen leaves. I guess if the
chipped
Post by Cerumen
slate was very small maybe a vacuum would lift them as well?
I suggested a blower action, not a vacuum action. Having said that, I
have a small spot covered with gravel pieces of approximately 1 cm in
dimension, and the vacuum has not sucked them up at all.

Franz
Double Digger
2004-10-31 14:14:59 UTC
Permalink
I have had the same problem with ash keys and leaves falling on my chipped
slate path. After a great deal of back breaking work trying to pick both up
from the slate chippings, I finished up putting the lot in buckets of water.
The leaves and keys floated to the surface leaving the chipped slate
submerged. All I then had to do was skim all the vegetable matter from the
bucket putting the washed slate chippings back on the path. Still quite a
job, but at least I managed to save all the slate which is not cheap to buy
in my area.

D.D.
---
Post by Diane Epps
snip<
Does anyone have any bright ideas of how I can collect the leaves which
have fallen all over a large chipped slate area?
Janet Baraclough..
2004-10-31 15:07:44 UTC
Permalink
Post by Double Digger
Post by Diane Epps
snip<
Does anyone have any bright ideas of how I can collect the leaves which
have fallen all over a large chipped slate area?
I finished up putting the lot in buckets of water.
Post by Double Digger
The leaves and keys floated to the surface leaving the chipped slate
submerged. All I then had to do was skim all the vegetable matter from the
bucket putting the washed slate chippings back on the path. Still quite a
job, but at least I managed to save all the slate which is not cheap to buy
in my area.
Why not rake them ? Use a long-tine springy rake (not the kind you use
for raking soil/beds).That's how we get leaves off (miles of) gravel
paths in a garden near here; a sort of flick movement separates the
leaves from the gravel leaving the gravel behind. The raked leaves can
be added to a compost heap or bagged up to make leafmould.

Janet.
Double Digger
2004-11-02 16:52:21 UTC
Permalink
Leaves, yes! Unfortunately not ash keys. They fell everywhere last autumn
and were a devil to collect. This summer I moved house so someone else has
the job. In his Guardian gardening column last weekend, Chris Lloyd said
that he *LIKES* ash trees. How can he? He obviously hadn't seen the four
monsters that shaded my old garden.
D.D.
---
Post by Janet Baraclough..
snip<
Why not rake them ? Use a long-tine springy rake (not the kind you use
for raking soil/beds).That's how we get leaves off (miles of) gravel
paths in a garden near here;
Borrop Little
2004-10-31 13:52:22 UTC
Permalink
Post by Diane Epps
Does anyone have any bright ideas of how I can collect the leaves whic
have
fallen all over a large chipped slate area? Hand knees and elbo
grease is
the method I have so far employed.
--
Never drive faster than your angel can fly
I've used a leaf vacuum on gravel - it's hopeless if the leaves are we
but Ok if dry, so long as you don't get too close

--
Borrop Little
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