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This morning I harvested a load of long coach bolts from my mans shed, and using my trusty soldering iron melted a hole in the middle of the bottom of the 100mm (4") Plastic Pots
This configuration gives the capping pots a nice handle to lift them off and back on when filling the worm towers, but better still adds weight to the plastic pot to prevent them just being blown off the top of the worm towers.
They look like Church hand bells, and I think they are quite cool, but there again I'm 68 and an allotmenteer so my concept of cool is shaded and questionable these days.
My sister Elaine brought me two tugs of grass from her back garden that was freshly cut this morning, and my son-in - law brought two sacks of a week or two old grass. I did hear my neighbour Sid cutting his grass and I will likely be offered that when he sees me over the fence in the next coupe of days.
More scaffold boards are coming Monday 15th June to enable me to complete the next two rows of beds.
This link will take you to my journal and will show all things worm towers related.
Current state of play of the back garden allotment
They create beautiful, well-designed outdoor spaces for children to enjoy with their family, friends and siblings, whether through play and fun, or therapeutic rest and relaxation.
Greenfingers Charity is driven by the belief that time spent outdoors, away from the bedside, can offer children and families under considerable stress a vital opportunity to embrace the benefits of being in the fresh air and engaging with the natural environment.
They are committed to creating specially designed, stimulating garden spaces that can bring many benefits to children with life-limiting conditions. Whilst many people may take for granted the simple pleasure of being able to enjoy a garden, for these children, their siblings and their families, the chance to spend time together outdoors and away from the bedside is precious.
I contacted Lee Ward of Oakland Gardens and they were more than happy for us to donate the £100 voucher to the Greenfingers Charity.
I spoke to Linda Petrons the Director of Fundraising & Communications at the Greenfingers Charity about our donation, and the likelihood is that they will use it to get items to raffle at their forthcoming Summer Charity Event.
I did suggest to Oakland Gardens that they may also like to donate some goods for the Greenfingers Charity Summer Event to help them raise funds.
I had and appointment at the SDEC unit at St Helier Hospital this morning for them to look at my leg and to take blood and look at my infection markers. During the blood taking process they used this Vein Viewer / Finder as I told them that during my weeks stay they had put so many cannula's in my hands and the veins were so small that they failed and had to find another in, that both hands were mullered, bruised and tender to touch.
My question was WTF had they not used this during my stay rather than try multiple unsuccessful attempts and caused so much damage to my hands?
It appears it's a matter of cost "They are expensive, and we don't have many and not each ward has got one" The cost appears to be about £1,500 ish. These are not new they have been around for 10 years. IMHO Every ward where they fit cannula's should have access to one of these machines.
A vein viewer / finder is a medical device that uses infrared or LED transillumination to project a real-time map of blood vessels onto the skin. It helps healthcare professionals and phlebotomists successfully locate veins for IVs and blood draws on the first attempt, reducing patient pain and procedure time