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Plants (6)
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James Alexander-Sinclair (13)

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Aching for annuals

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 23/09/2008 12:34:00

Are you snowed under with seed catalogues? It seems that even before the summer stutters to an end we have to start thinking about next year.I don't usually grow much in the way of annuals in my garden (apart from dahlias and poppies, of course


Annual climbers

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 12/10/2009 12:20:25

than plant a rose or another wisteria - there might be some unpleasantness hiding in the soil - I decided to stick with annual climbers. We usually have morning glories (Ipomoea species) in pots, so I moved one of them to fill in and it did an admirable


Charles Darwin and worms

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 13/01/2009 13:51:06

the occasion with Darwin Season 2009.I'm ashamed to admit that I haven't yet read the whole book (at the moment I am rather swept up in the 2009 Oor Wullie annual and a fantastic book about the battle for the Mediterranean in the 16th century, Empires


'Grow Your Own' Week: Forest gardening

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 29/03/2010 10:24:02

that perhaps we can bring our two skills together.The idea of forest gardening is to get away from the traditional vegetable plot (neat rows of annual vegetables that need to be sown every year) towards a more perennial way of growing edible plants. Perennial


Octoberfest

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 09/10/2007 11:38:02

: there seems little point in weeding much (the nights are too cold for most annual weeds to bother with seeding themselves), why bother to tie back a sprawling plant when you are going to cut them all down anyway soon? Even the grass stops growing quite


Spring flowers - my least favourites

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 25/03/2008 13:26:00

of colour and life; in the majority of cases this is to be welcomed. Hooray for the resurgence of tulips, whoopee for the return of the rose and yippee for the arrival of annuals.However, there are some plants which I am not looking forward to seeing again


Gardening and cigarette cards

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 03/03/2009 08:09:20

on such small bits of card!Another is a series of fifty garden flowers ranging from delphiniums and water lilies to annuals like bright red salvias and candytuft. Each card has a bit of information and some hints about cultivation written by Richard Sudell - who


Poppies and suchlike

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 16/06/2009 15:36:24

) have started flowering. (They are annuals and not to be confused with the beefier oriental poppies - like this striking red Papaver orientale 'Beauty of Livermere'.)These are one of my most favourite flowers: so delicate, so unbelievably beautiful


Growing sweet peas

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 20/06/2011 17:47:30

sentence, which is directly related to my personal experiences of growing annual sweet peas.


Dianthus: In the pink

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 02/09/2008 13:56:00

, with regular deadheading, keep going until the autumn. Propagation is also quite simple: take cuttings from the non-flowering shoots in the summer.I haven't even started on alpine and annual varieties but must mention D. carthusianorum - a really good perennial


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