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Frost on flowers

By Adam Pasco on 25/02/2008 10:12:00

moments our gardens they don't last for long; like blooms that open for just one day; scent filling the air; the antics of a bee quenching its thirst on a nectar-rich flower.You just need to be there and treasure that moment. Sometimes others are around


Compost and green manures

By Adam Pasco on 31/03/2008 10:23:00

.Types to sow now include crimson clover, fenugreek, field lupins - even broad beans. They germinate and grow quickly and reduce weed growth. Flowering varieties even attract bees and beneficial insects.Nothing could be simpler, and the green manures help break


Plant supports for beans and sweet peas

By Pippa Greenwood on 01/05/2008 12:33:00

planted in my children's plots, complete with home-made plant supports. According to my children "when the beans grow they can use the wigwams too", because "you did say that sweet peas help to encourage the bees to pollinate them".The wigwams are both


Potatoes, broccoli and bumblebees

By Jane Moore on 23/05/2008 16:02:05

for all the bumble bees in the area. Given that they're endangered, that must be a good thing.


Slugs and hedgehogs

By Jane Moore on 08/08/2008 12:49:00

The plot is abuzz with wildlife, including ladybirds, lacewings, bumblebees and ground beetles. They're all marvellous for my crops; bees increase my yields by pollinating flowers, and ladybirds and lacewings eat a lot of aphids. As well


Spring flowers - primrose and rosemary

By Jekka McVicar on 20/03/2008 17:18:00

, then tossed in butter.Another herb I associate with Easter is rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis). My rosemary plants are starting to flower, which is lovely as the flowers provides early nectar for the bees. The downside is that these plants won't make


Growing borage for Chelsea

By Jekka McVicar on 04/04/2008 16:27:00

of being outside our plants have experienced wind, rain, hail and sunshine. I'm pleased to report no damage has been done - they're looking good and flowering spikes are appearing.Borage is a great herb for vegetable gardens. The flowers attract bees, which


Top of the veg

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 22/11/2007 08:53:02

vegetables also make good additions to the border - asparagus has gorgeous ferny foliage and artichoke flowers are bee magnets(Jerusalem artichokes are, however, excluded due to the possibility of indelicate post-prandial thunderings).Less obvious


Wildlife and wild death

By Richard Jones on 18/06/2008 12:14:00

in an old disused sandpit I guess I will never discover, nor how long it had been there.It is much too big for the local foxes to bother with, but I have already seen a solitary bee, an Andrena species, sunning itself on the forehead, and ants have been


Bugs and daylilies

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 01/07/2008 12:07:00

My garden - like yours - is looking fantastic at the moment. Plants that were just poking from cold ground a couple of months ago are now enormous and luxuriant. Bees buzz, roses overflow and lawns are lush.Rather than just brag, I thought I


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