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Fasciation

By Richard Jones on 06/07/2011 15:27:53

Just outside the back door is a lanky tuft of Veronicastrum virginicum. It's a good bee flower, with honeybees and bumbles visiting often. And this is the third year in a row that we have had a fasciated flower on it.I remember, very clearly


Wildlife-friendly plants

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:40:38

(Joe-pye weed)Useful websites for wildlife gardeningGardeners' World wildlife blogsMake a bee hotelMore plants for beesWildlife gardening tipsButterfly Conservation Trust


Pruning wisteria

By Adam Pasco on 04/05/2009 10:22:22

displays on so many trees and shrubs, such as pieris. But with blossom on many fruit trees now at its peak, frost can kill flowers before bees have had a chance to pollinate them. When this happens the blossom will fall without developing any fruit


Growing alliums

By Pippa Greenwood on 19/05/2010 15:12:26

accessible source of pollen for bees and hoverflies. If left into into winter, the papery brown seed heads look beautiful when covered in dense frost.Apart from the addition of extra grit to my heavy soil, keeping my alliums has been easy. Despite frequent


Verbena bonariensis

By Adam Pasco on 09/08/2010 11:33:38

Will our love affair with Verbena bonariensis ever wane? This fabulous flower looks as good growing individually among low border plants as it does planted en masse. The open, airy quality of the stems only adds to the appeal. Wildlife loves V


Growing Russian vine

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 21/11/2011 16:07:14

by this plant: on the surface it is an excellent idea - fast growing, popular with bees, long flowering (it will happily perform for months) and reliably tough in all situations. However, it is also as untameable as a coach load of Visigoths on the razzle


Growing Verbena bonariensis from seed

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:40:11

and naturalise in borders, so any plants lost to frost should be replaced by their offspring.More features and advice on growing herbaceous perennialsLearn how to take verbena cuttingsGrow plants to attract beesChoose flowers for late-summer colour


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


Sunflowers and hoverflies

By Kate Bradbury on 29/07/2011 15:13:53

that the plants are providing a late source of nectar and pollen for bees, hoverflies and other pollinators. Soon they'll be plenty of seed for the birds.How are your sunflowers coming along? Have they reached the dizzy height of 2m or more? Do let us know


Pollen

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 25/03/2009 09:52:10

problem: the hazel (unlike many plants) cannot fertilise itself, so needs to find another tree. How to disseminate pollen from one tree to another? Many plants use insects — bees, wasps, moths, butterflies or ants — while others draw on the services


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