Wulf's Webden

The Webden on WordPress

2 June 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

Don’t Rush

Getting plants into the ground at the right time is quite a challenge. Often I end up leaving them in pots too long, so they get root-bound, and they don’t always recover fully from the experience. However, I wonder if I put my squash and courgette plants out at the allotment a bit early?

I put two varieties of squash and one type of courgette up there a couple of weeks ago. The courgettes were pretty weedy and only one seems to have survived although it has put on a bit of bulk. One variety of squash was fairly robust and is beginning to grow and the other was also fairly fragile – I even managed to snap one of the necks when planting out although it has survived having things tied round with some string and it might make it.

What made me ponder on this was that I had another plant of that latter, “Friulano”, squash that was late to germinate. I didn’t plant that at the same time but kept it growing on in the polytunnel and then, for the last few days after being potted up, on a shelf in the back garden. It is now by far and away the biggest of that variety and I planted it out at the allotment this morning. It wouldn’t surprise me if it turns out to be the best yielding of that bunch.

So, the lesson I think I need to learn is not only not to leave plants potted for too long but, with the ones grown from seed, not to rush them out too early.

1 June 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

Hathern Youth Bands

This evening we went to see the Hathern Youth Bands as part of Hathern Big week. They have about 50 children and young people regularly taking part and, although the very youngest (4-5 years old) have got a way to go, you can clearly see the progression in skill as they go up in age.

31 May 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

Efficient packing

I was pleased to be able to get the equipment I needed for each of today’s park gigs down a single load (thanks to my sack trolley and the cooler box I picked up last year).

One of the tricks was knowing what I could do without. For example, for this afternoon’s CSWO gig, I didn’t need a lot of effects, so I set up a few patches on my Zoom B3. That is a lot smaller than my Helix LT but, although it has a maximum of 3 effects at any one time, I could get everything I needed. Most of the gig was with an amp model and a touch of reverb. On one song (Birdland) I could enhance that with chorus and, on the most FX-heavy (a medley of 80’s tunes), I had one patch with a couple of blocks used to build a synth sound and another that let me add chorus and / or distortion to my basic modelled amp sound.

A little 3D printing also helped – rather than needing to lug a guitar stand, I have one I designed and printed last year that fits onto the sack trolley and holds my bass securely. It’s nice having more gear on hand sometimes but also great when things can be compressed down to a neat, portable package.

30 May 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

Park Life

Tomorrow, you will mainly find me playing live music in parks.

In the morning, I’m part of Hathern Baptist Church’s band for their service – held in the big marquee down at Hathern Park as part of the village’s “Big Week” events. That starts at 10:15am with pastries and light refreshments.

I would have liked to have stayed around for the open mic event in the afternoon but I need to make my way down to Queen’s Park in Loughborough, where the Charnwood Symphonic Wind Orchestra are performing from 2pm until a little after 3pm. There should be some excellent music although we will be a bit squeezed onto the bandstand – the band has grown a bit over the last year so, even though I’m on electric bass, I might need to hold it in quite an upright position!

29 May 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

String ’em up

Over the last couple of days, I’ve been getting tied up in knots. My mission has been to make use of the anchors I installed in the soil before planting out tomatoes in the polytunnel and running strings up to the support bar. At the moment, the plants are small and don’t need much support but they are putting on rapid growth. Coming out of the pot and into the soil will do that for many plants and tomatoes are particularly vigorous. Last year I injured my arm in mid-May and didn’t get the plants properly tied up; a decent amount of fruit but it would have been easier to tend to and harvest the plants if it hadn’t been such a jungle.

At the bottom, I’ve got an eyelet to tie through and I’ve opted for a bowline. It is a fairly simple knot (although I’ve had to spend some time revising it). It holds firm under load and should be possible to untie at the end of the season.

At the top, I need to fasten round a horizontal bar and add that load. For this one, I’m using an adjustable grip hitch. I don’t think I’ve mastered the tying of it and I’m not sure it is the best choice for some of the string I am using but (with the help of some hand drawn diagrams) I’ve made a reasonable job of it so far and it should improve as I practise with the remaining plants.

28 May 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

Gathered to Go

The Gathered to Go album I joined the choir for back in January got released this week. Officially it came out yesterday but it is propagating round various online platforms more slowly – the YouTube version came out today:

Every online play provides a fraction of a cent and sometime next spring I’ll be totting up all the plays of all the Jubilate and Resound Songs and using that to figure out how to split up what was actually received in the account so that artists get the right royalty payment. Online streams are good because they make it more likely that other people will also discover the songs but, having been behind the scenes for the first time, it is very clear that direct purchases support the charity and the artists much more. For that, see the Jubilate website.

One caveat – I think this is a great project with some fantastic songs but don’t expect to be able to pick out my voice in the choir parts (or perhaps that is a bonus!).

27 May 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

Southern Folk Rhapsody

Yesterday I pressed the button on a new piece of music for the concert band:

It combines a bunch of tunes I know fairly well but I suspect some of them (except Swing Low, Sweet Chariot) will be new to some of the my fellow players. What particularly attracted me though was that there is nothing particularly difficult about any individual part but there are some wonderful bits of orchestration as Michael Sweeney takes us from one piece to another. I think we can make a good job of it but I don’t think we’ll nail it on the first couple of tries… which is ideal for a piece that will make us work and get us to a worthwhile result.

26 May 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

SVG Icons

Today I was looking for an efficient way to include a PDF icon on my website for the concert band music. I remembered that the Bootstrap CSS library used to have something called glyphicons but, while I was looking for them, I stumbled across their set of icons. I remember experimenting with SVG graphics a long time ago, when it was a new idea on the web, but this means I can have neat, scalable icons that take up a fraction of the space that a JPEG or PNG or other rasterised image format would.

I haven’t figured out how to embed them in this blog or you’d probably have a row of them dancing across the page but I think this is going to be a very useful extra snippet of knowledge for me.

25 May 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

Pen Magnet

It is useful having a pen available in the kitchen and, for quite a while, I’ve been keeping a biro on the fridge using a magnet held on with an elastic band wrapped round several times. It has been a good solution but the elastic band is now perishing and it was time to work out what to do next. I suppose the simple solution would have been another elastic band or perhaps a dab of hot glue but I’ve got a 3D printer so today I’ve been designing, prototyping and printing a custom solution.

I observed that this particular biro has a screw cap at the end opposite the writing point. I realised that, if this was unscrewed a bit it would still be firm but could also hold a ring in place which, in turn, could hold a small fitting to house the magnet.

Draft one came together quickly but a couple of the measurements weren’t quite right. In particular, I’d neglected to leave enough depth for the magnet so the housing wasn’t flush to the barrel but bent away from it. I ended up doing three more prints, with tweaks between each. The first was a partial print to check the lower section with the ring and housing. Next I realised that rather than a weak ring, I could use a rounded triangular shape (actually a hull between a circle and a rounded rectangle) to add more strength. The dimensions were still a bit off but my final version solved that as well as adding an extra hole to make it easier if I want to push the magnet out in future: it was pressed in tightly and a bit of a pain to extract from failed prototypes.

The pen now sits back on the fridge looking neater than it ever has before and, meanwhile, I am starting work on the next design project…

24 May 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

Looking Down on the Back Garden – May 2026

Looking Down on the Back Garden - May 2026

I normally like to wait for an overcast morning to take my regular photos of the back garden but there’s a chance we aren’t going to get one of those before May runs out. Light cloud cover diffuses the light and reduces the contrast in the photo. The big story of this picture is that, as is normally expected in late spring, there is lots of growth and plenty of splashes of colour, even if the conditions this was taken under make it a little harder to see.