NorthofEngland
Well-Known Member
Over the last months I've been taking advantage of the God awful British weather to hike all over the local countryside and scout possible Guerrilla spots, whilst all the sane people are indoors, nice and warm and dry.
I came to a miniature valley that, as kids 30 years ago, we used to slide down the sides on sleds and go-carts.
But now it's virtually impassable.
Completely overgrown with thorny brambles and nettles and all the sharp, painful things that grow in the outdoors of Northern England.
I couldn't get in there and the dog point blank refused to even try - he just looked at me as though I'd lost my mind.
So I turned around and walked away.
Two days later I returned wearing my toughest pair of walking boots, two layers of card wrapped around my lower legs and long strips of canvas cloth (army puttee's) wrapped over the card and tied.
Jogging bottoms hid the make shift armour and I tucked the bottoms into long sports socks to completely hide it AND keep it all in place.
I could wade through the sharp, ankle to knee deep foliage by raising my feet as though I was walking through snow and being extra careful about tripping over.
The 'valley' is a perfect 'V' groove in the landscape. Each side has steep inclines (45*ish) about 50 to 80ft from top to bottom and back from bottom to top.
As you move along the size and gradient changes but it is all overgrown and impassable).
At the bottom is a narrow and slow moving stream (on maps it's a river but locals call it 'the dike').
The few feet at either side of the dike is marsh like, with some reeds.
It is my plan to head back down in early morning and later afternoon to try and see how much sun the area can expect.
By clearing a 4ft x 4ft patch and digging a barrel, with a screen bottom, 1ft deep and putting a few inches of gravel, followed by a mix of the native soil and by own additives (perlite, sand, compost...)
I hope to do all I can to prevent the damage that too much rain can cause BUT still have a water source close by, if we have one of our very infrequent droughts.
ANY SUGGESTIONS OR ADVISE ABOUT HOW TO PROCEED WOULD BE VERY WELCOME
THIS IS MY FIRST OUTDOOR GROW AND, DESPITE READING ANYTHING I CAN FIND, I STILL FEEL HOPELESSLY UNINFORMED.
I came to a miniature valley that, as kids 30 years ago, we used to slide down the sides on sleds and go-carts.
But now it's virtually impassable.
Completely overgrown with thorny brambles and nettles and all the sharp, painful things that grow in the outdoors of Northern England.
I couldn't get in there and the dog point blank refused to even try - he just looked at me as though I'd lost my mind.
So I turned around and walked away.
Two days later I returned wearing my toughest pair of walking boots, two layers of card wrapped around my lower legs and long strips of canvas cloth (army puttee's) wrapped over the card and tied.
Jogging bottoms hid the make shift armour and I tucked the bottoms into long sports socks to completely hide it AND keep it all in place.
I could wade through the sharp, ankle to knee deep foliage by raising my feet as though I was walking through snow and being extra careful about tripping over.
The 'valley' is a perfect 'V' groove in the landscape. Each side has steep inclines (45*ish) about 50 to 80ft from top to bottom and back from bottom to top.
As you move along the size and gradient changes but it is all overgrown and impassable).
At the bottom is a narrow and slow moving stream (on maps it's a river but locals call it 'the dike').
The few feet at either side of the dike is marsh like, with some reeds.
It is my plan to head back down in early morning and later afternoon to try and see how much sun the area can expect.
By clearing a 4ft x 4ft patch and digging a barrel, with a screen bottom, 1ft deep and putting a few inches of gravel, followed by a mix of the native soil and by own additives (perlite, sand, compost...)
I hope to do all I can to prevent the damage that too much rain can cause BUT still have a water source close by, if we have one of our very infrequent droughts.
ANY SUGGESTIONS OR ADVISE ABOUT HOW TO PROCEED WOULD BE VERY WELCOME
THIS IS MY FIRST OUTDOOR GROW AND, DESPITE READING ANYTHING I CAN FIND, I STILL FEEL HOPELESSLY UNINFORMED.