I use a nylon net hung from eye screws & anchored with garden spikes.
Non-fiction. Working title is: “The Communist International and the Challenge to British India, 1919-1943”.
timberati:
alikocho:
Huh. Who knew (other than you). That makes for an interesting link to India under the British Empire, given that jute was one of the major economic concerns of the British Empire in India (geeky I know, but I’m writing a book on something related at the moment.)
Non-fiction or fiction? Working title?
Non-fiction. Working title is: “The Communist International and the Challenge to British India, 1919-1943”.
Do you have a book deal or is it too new?
alikocho:
timberati:
alikocho:
Huh. Who knew (other than you). That makes for an interesting link to India under the British Empire, given that jute was one of the major economic concerns of the British Empire in India (geeky I know, but I’m writing a book on something related at the moment.)
Non-fiction or fiction? Working title?
Non-fiction. Working title is: “The Communist International and the Challenge to British India, 1919-1943”.
Do you have a book deal or is it too new?
I’m currently discussing it with a publisher, but haven’t signed anything yet.
bailing twine. If you have a farm supply store, go buy some. cheap, lasts the season, rip it down, put new up, you’ll never use the spools up.
I bought 4 rolls of Jute twine. Each roll is 200ft at $2.99 each. Very economical… The Jute twine is coarse enough for the hop vines to climb up, even with tough winds; they love it, and they don’t let go of it… I’ll soon post pictures…
Have checked freshops. That’s were I got my coir.
$5.50/bundle
1 bundle = 10 strings X 20 feet per string = 200 total feet per bundle
