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Try going back to the homepage About Best Sellers in Shower Curtains These lists, updated hourly, contain bestselling items. Here you can discover the best Shower Curtains in Amazon Best Sellers, and find the top 100 most popular Amazon Shower Curtains.This is an archived post. You won't be able to vote or comment. My friend made me a new shower curtain for Christmas. It is the best shower curtain ever. Create & Buy a Custom Product of Your Own! Set the theme of bathroom with a personalized shower curtain to match the tile and vanity colors. Designed to fit standardized bath tubs and fully waterproof from color wear, this polyester shower curtain is able to print a vast range of colors with a fine degree of detail. In addition, this tough durable fabric allows for easy cleaning.Do not bleach or tumble dry Fitted with curtain hooks Has 12 holes to which rings attach Images imprinted using heat dye sublimation technique for lasting effects. Measures approximately 60"(w) x 72"(h)
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Dimensions are 71in. by 74in.Nigel Gresley Close, Crewe, Cheshire CW1 Interested in this property? Call 01270 359874 * or * Calls to this number will be recorded for quality, compliance and training purposes. Detached propertyFour bedroomsModern family bathroom, en suite and down stairs WCLounge and dining roomContemporary kitchen and utilityGardens and garageHallWCDining RoomLoungeKitchen BreakfastUtilityLandingBedroom OneEn-suiteBedroom TwoBedroom ThreeBedroom FourBathroomExternalGarageapollo curtains oakleigh Get a property reportunwrinkle curtains TransportSchoolsHealthcareFood storesRestaurants/barsPlaces of worshipSports/health clubsParks/recreationhello kitty curtains sulit Property value data/graphs for CW1
Avg. £ per sq ft. Compare to another area Current asking prices in CW1 Avg. current asking prices in CW1 Current asking rents in CW1 Fun facts for CW1 Highest value in CW1 Highest turnover in CW1 What Zoopla users think of Crewe Tell us what you think of this area by rating these categories. Please note your vote will only be counted once. Note: Distances are straight line measurements Local info for Cheshire East About the neighbours in CW1 AskMe Q&A for Cheshire East Offers on a 4 bed detached house, no garage, but has been greatly extended in Crewe? Asked on Jan 21 2012, What's it like to live in Crewe? Asked on Feb 3 2008, Repossesions in CW1 3PQ. Asked on Jan 7 2012, Get advice from local owners and expertsWith its purple, golden-eyed flowers full of fragrant glory looking their best at this time of year, buddleia  is undoubtedly Britain’s prettiest and most popular late-summer shrub.
Also known as the ‘Butterfly Bush’ because its nectar attracts so many insects, you can see it flourishing in parks and gardens all over the country.But perhaps it is flourishing a little too well, for the plant has  just been given a black mark by the Government.Officials at the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) consider buddleia an ‘invasive alien’. What a pejorative term for such a beneficial plant. The phrase conjures up man-eating space monsters or foreign tanks roaring up our beaches. Buddleia: Also known as the 'Butterfly Bush' because its nectar attracts so many insects, you can see it flourishing in parks and gardens all over the country According to Defra, the shrub, which was originally brought here from China and named after a  late 17th-century Essex vicar, has spread too widely, out-competes native vegetation and reduces biodiversity. It also damages buildings by growing between bricks or concrete and eating away mortar. And rather like fallen leaves or the wrong sort of snow, buddleia (scientific name Buddleja davidii) is also accused of causing ‘significant problems to management of the rail network’ because it grows so prolifically by train lines. 
As a result, Defra is asking gardeners to remove seed heads after the plant has flowered, so as to prevent its spread. This is important, officials say, because the seeds can fly long distances on the wind. In view of such serious charges against such a much-loved shrub, we should scrutinise the evidence for Defra’s claims — and the record of the government department itself. According to Defra, the shrub, which was originally brought here from China, has spread too widely, out-competes native vegetation and reduces biodiversity Of course, some alien plants can be severely damaging. Water plants such as New Zealand Pygmy Weed and Parrot’s Feather were introduced for planting in ornamental ponds. But they soon escaped into natural lakes and streams, where damage to wildlife has been extensive. Sales of these plants, along with other destructive aliens, are rightly prohibited.But Defra’s approach to invasive plant species is muddled and inconsistent. Take, for example, the infamous Japanese knotweed.
This is ferociously invasive and difficult to eradicate. There are even (untrue) claims that it can grow through solid concrete.  Though it is undoubtedly unattractive and unwelcome, Defra makes clear in its fact-sheet on the plant that there are no health or social threats from Japanese knotweed. Nevertheless, by law, it must be eradicated on development sites. The cost of this can be more than £1,000 per square metre because topsoil and debris in the area have to be treated as if they are toxic waste. Getting rid of the pernicious weed from the 2012 Olympic site in London cost £70 million.No such laws have yet been applied to buddleia, thank goodness. But you can’t help but fear that a Defra mandarin will glance out of a train window, see the Butterfly Bush in all its rampant glory and issue a fatwa against it.To my eyes, buddleia on a railway line looks lovely. When I passed drifts of it near London’s King’s Cross station recently, the colours were subtly varied, running from deep purple to pale lilac or almost white.
If buddleia is so wicked, why do gardeners love it?The Royal Horticultural Society — a respected, science-based institution — still recommends it as a desirable shrub. Nature conservation bodies — while acknowledging its invasiveness — also recognise the huge value of this plant. The charity Butterfly Conservation makes the point that although it is not a native plant, buddleia has become an important nectar source in both town and country. On a hot day, it is a butterflies’ paradise. Gardeners are grateful for this undemanding plant. It’s easy to grow and copes with poor soil and wanton neglect.Trees and shrubs that flower in spring are two-a-penny. But late-summer colour, particularly that dazzling purple, is rare. And never forget the butterflies. No other plant is such a magnet to them. On warm days, flocks of tortoiseshells, peacocks, red admirals and other species will feast to such excess that they become sleepy and stay put, even if you breathe on them. Species that hibernate need the food to help them through the coming winter.
Buddleias provide nectar and pollen to bees and other insects. On a warm, still night, you’ll find as many moths feeding as there are butterflies by day. Gardeners are grateful for this undemanding plant. It¿s easy to grow and copes with poor soil and wanton neglect Buddleia has been treasured in British gardens since the early 1900s, having been brought to Europe from Sichuan in China by a French missionary. Yes, it is ‘alien’ — as is so much of our flora — but there’s not one jot of scientific evidence that it wrecks biodiversity or smothers our ‘native’ plants. When you see buddleias spreading on waste ground — along with willowherb and ragwort — they won’t have killed off anything botanically special.The wind-blown seeds are merely opportunists, germinating in previously bare ground. And once that scrub is established, other creatures will arrive, and the formerly barren patch will be brought back to life. Buddleia actually enhances biodiversity.In fact, I believe that Defra itself, rather than those delightful buddleia bushes, is more worthy of a cull.
Its lame approach to nature conservation in the countryside is largely responsible for the destruction of hedgerows and meadowland. It has not done enough to encourage farmers and roadway authorities to protect them. Its officials allow excessive verge-mowing, which stops wild flowers from flourishing by the roadsides as they did in the Fifties. This monolithic mega-ministry, created by the Blair government in 2001, results from an unholy merging of previously separate departments — including Environment, Agriculture, Fisheries, Nature Conservation and the nebulous ‘Rural Affairs’. The result is a cumbersome monster whose short history makes depressing reading. Defra was fined by the EU for inexcusable delays in subsidy payments to farmers — bringing some close to bankruptcy. It has presided over the fiasco of Ash Dieback Disease — having allowed the disease to enter Britain through lax import regulations and lay waste to our trees. 'Trying to eradicate buddleia from wild areas would cost a great deal more and would be almost impossible to achieve'