London (change)
Today 16°C / 6°C
Tomorrow 11°C / 5°C
Keywords:
Sort by:

1 to 10 of 19 results

Rose bloom balling

By Gardeners' World on 19/10/2011 14:04:42

Balling is triggered by cool, damp conditions, often in a partially shady site, where water-saturated outer petals fail to dry out before being scorched by the sun. The mushy plant tissue dries to form a stiff straightjacket around the petals, preventing the flower from opening. ...


Clematis wilt

By Gardeners' World on 18/10/2011 11:03:01

Clematis wilt is caused by a fungus that enters the plant through a wound made by an insect or an abrasion, such as rubbing from a plant tie. It's spread by water splash, and blocks the uptake of water in the stems, causing instant collapse. Infected foliage must be disposed of i...


Late-flowering clematis

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:32:45

-flowering clematis. Given their willingness to grow in sun or shade and to scramble up any kind of support, there's no garden that can't accommodate at least one or two.Clematis produce their display on the current season's growth. That's why it's common to see


How to plant a grapevine

By Gardeners' World on 19/07/2011 16:04:35

Learn how to grow your own crop of delicious, juicy dessert grapes, in this video clip featuring Monty Don. Monty recommends some high-quality, disease-resistant varieties and shares tips on soil preparation and planting depth.spring to autumnMore advice on growing fruitMake the ...


Leafcutter bees

By Gardeners' World on 18/10/2011 15:15:14

Nesting female bees cut out immediately obvious elliptical shapes from the edges of a leaf to make their cells for laying eggs. Since one female might need 20 or so cells, that's a lot of leaf cutting, particularly when the bee keeps returning


Rose leaf rolling sawfly

By Gardeners' World on 18/10/2011 15:54:02

The rose leaf rolling sawfly injects a chemical into young rose leaves to cause them to curl protectively around her eggs. Within a week the eggs hatch into green caterpillars that start to eat their home. In mid-summer, leaving behind skeletonised foliage, they crawl down into t...


Reversion

By Gardeners' World on 19/10/2011 14:00:12

Sometimes shoots appear on previously plain-leaved plants with attractive variegations, and these can then be propagated by nurserymen to make a new plant. But the new variegated plant might try to revert to all-green foliage because the mutation isn't stable. If left, this all-g...


Rose blackspot

By Gardeners' World on 19/10/2011 14:03:04

Aptly named blackspot is a fungus that causes dark spotting on rose leaves and stems. Eventually, leaves turn yellow and drop off before autumn. Spores overwinter on the fallen leaves and re-infect the plant in spring when new foliage appears. Plants can be weakened by recurrent ...


Rose powdery mildew

By Gardeners' World on 19/10/2011 14:06:08

Rose powdery mildew is a fungus that produces airborne spores from infected stems or buds on roses. After overwintering on your plants, the disease is most likely to flare up if the roots are in dry soil and the leaves are in humid air - conditions that are often found when plant...


Rose rust

By Gardeners' World on 19/10/2011 14:07:30

The fungal spores that cause rust are spread on the wind, and they can survive over winter on the soil surface, on fallen debris and even objects such as fences and stakes. The symptoms spread in early summer from patches of orange on the stems and leaf stalks of roses to more ob...


1 to 10 of 19 results
Search time: 0.019 secs