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Garden birds and my Big Garden Birdwatch

By Kate Bradbury on 27/01/2011 16:01:59

visiting my plot. I put seed out for them which the pigeons couldn't reach (they had their own), and fashioned a snow-proof feeding station using an umbrella, which sheltered the birds and seed from snow. I left chopped apples in the borders. Everything


Plum trees

By Lila Das Gupta on 26/11/2009 15:05:20

."Unlike apples, plum trees are mostly self-fertile, but if you live in the North of England or are in an area prone to late frosts, then you may wish to plant the later flowering varieties."'Marjorie's Seedling' and 'Czar' are particularly good for frost


Octoberfest

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

as relentlessly. It is best just to watch: in the morning the spiders webs are glimmering with dew, the sun sneaks over the horizon at a much more civilised hour, the light is different, the sun (when it is there) is just the right temperature, the trees


Swifts, newts and decking

By Richard Jones on 07/05/2008 12:12:00

? Decking. I'm not sure what the received wisdom on decking is, but we have a thoroughfare near the end of the garden between the lawn and a secluded patio. Overshadowed by apple tree and creeper-covered pergola, and trodden underfoot by children stampeding


Garden frost

By Adam Pasco on 12/01/2009 09:17:49

have dropped low enough to kill off some overwintering pests such as the woolly aphid I discovered on my apple trees last summer. The problem is that frost isn't that discerning, and unless beneficial insects like ladybirds are even hardier, or have


How to prune your plants

By Gardeners' World on 20/07/2011 15:07:36

Pruning spring-flowering shrubsSummer pruning apple trees


National Conifer Week

By Adam Pasco on 05/10/2009 09:00:17

There are days nominated to celebrate apples, festivals for tomatoes and chillies, and whole weeks to inform us about bird nesting boxes, trees, allotments and composting ... and this week it's the turn of the conifer.The Association of British


'Grow Your Own' Week: Forest gardening

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

be layers of food from tall trees through shrubs down to perennials and ground cover. So starting with things like chestnuts (Castanea sativa); cornelian cherries (Cornus mas) and obvious things like apples, mulberries and plums. Then shrubby stuff like


It was a dark and stormy day...

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 11/12/2007 08:51:02

Scott's tree planting habits).- The Merry Hall Trilogy. I adore these books: beautifully written, light and fluffy sagas about a new garden taken on in the 1950s by novelist Beverley Nichols. He writes very amusingly about people, places, plants and cats


Insects on compost heaps

By Richard Jones on 28/05/2008 13:14:00

of flies emerges.Fruit flies (at least two Drosophila species) feature strongly, which is no surprise given the amount of apple cores, banana skins, melon shells and potato peelings we chuck in each week. Although the adult flies are only 2.5mm long


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