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How to take rosemary cuttings

By Gardeners' World on 20/07/2011 16:18:51

as soon as roots have formed.More on growing herbsSow basil seed, video advice from Joe SwiftGrowing peppermint and thyme, with Monty DonDeterring rosemary leaf beetleAdvice on picking herbs


Snail attack

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 17/07/2007 09:38:02

In two large pots I am growing big white lilies (lets not talk about the dapper scarlet lily beetles and their repulsively slimy offspring at the moment - too depressing) and a luscious deep red dahlia called Arabian Night. Around the feet


Birds and butterflies

By Richard Jones on 20/07/2007 10:57:49

must be the swift snatching up a flying insect. The last few evenings have been very good for insects bumping up against the lighted windows of the kitchen. Monday saw a female stag beetle, upturned, legs in the air, as she bumped into the wall


Organic pest control

By Adam Pasco on 28/09/2007 09:10:01

Parts of my garden have resembled something of a battleground this year. Why is it that all my favourite plants and crops have their very own pest to contend with? Grow lilies and you'll be hard pressed not to find lily beetle munching them. My


Bird watching

By Richard Jones on 21/11/2007 10:57:49

I don't really do birds. I'm usually too busy peering down at insects on flowers or running across leaves. Or I'm on hands and knees, bum in the air, turning stones over looking for ground beetles or grubbing at plant roots for weevils


Weevils

By Richard Jones on 16/01/2008 11:29:00

is that it arrived with the decorative plantings used around the car parks and ornamental lakes. Although unlikely to become a pest like its 'vine' relative, the beetle is probably well established in Britain. It's known from at least a half-dozen places, usually


Horticultural fleece

By Jekka McVicar on 25/02/2008 17:25:00

in the carrot family, such as parsley, from carrot root fly and those in the brassica family, including salad rocket, from flea beetle.


Swifts, newts and decking

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

in when the old one sprung a leak. Our pond is raised, three railway sleepers high off the ground, so these two females and a male had managed to scramble up and climb in. There's not much else going on in the water yet - no boatmen or beetles or skaters


Grey squirrels

By Richard Jones on 17/06/2009 18:19:39

on the sills for the half-tame squirrel. We duly obliged.On their return we got to chatting about gardens and wildlife, what the swifts were up to, how many stag beetles had come flying over. When talk turned to the half-tame squirrel I was told, very


An orgy of ants

By Richard Jones on 12/08/2009 10:27:22

first thought were dark lines of silt washed along the high water mark were actually strand lines of dead insects. I listed over 100 species, including many beetles, but the vast majority were the winged male and female black ants. I tried to do a rough


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