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James Alexander-Sinclair (5)
Richard Jones (4)
Adam Pasco (1)

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Cup and saucer vine

By Adam Pasco on 19/11/2007 10:12:02

A wooden obelisk at the heart of my formal garden plays host to a variety of annual climbers, but I've grown tired of sweet peas in recent years. Their performance relies on the right weather, but we don't seem to be getting the 'right' weather any


Quiet beginnings

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 28/12/2007 15:14:04

. When we built this house there was a lot of wall either side of the front door and I was looking for a suitable climber. There are basically three sorts of plant that are good for covering walls: self clinging climbers (like Hydrangea petiolaris


A rose by any other name...

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 04/12/2007 08:51:02

irises.I digress; my favourite roses at the moment are the Hybrid Musk roses. They were mostly bred by the Rev. Joseph Pemberton in the early 20th Century and make great shrubs and small climbers. They are soft coloured, like cowrie pink 'Penelope', clean


Wolf spider

By Richard Jones on 26/03/2008 10:29:00

in the thicket of climber on the fence. The first ladybird of the year, a seven-spot, sunned itself on the ivy. And one of my favourite spiders is back.Pisaura mirabilis is a beautifully sleek and elegant creature, dusky grey with a beige streak down its back. It


Butterflies: meadow browns and gatekeepers

By Richard Jones on 23/07/2008 12:27:00

and climbers, making them appear more hedge-like. Maybe the gatekeeper caterpillars, which feed on grasses like other brown butterflies, prefer a more shaded aspect to feed in.Or it may simply be that gatekeepers spend more of their time perching up high


Plants for winter scent

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 11/02/2008 10:54:00

in the back of my car overnight; the plant was young and had only a single flower but the scent in the car was almost unbearable. Like being dipped in vanilla. Another corker is winter-flowering honeysuckle, Lonicera fragrantissima. Not a climber but a medium


Godshill Model Village

By Richard Jones on 16/04/2008 11:57:00

or so semi-bonsai topiary trees. Many are sculpted into bobble 'cloud' shapes or manicured to form miniature hedges and climbers around the intricate buildings. They really make the place a magical world and produce a series of spectacular vistas


Plants on railway embankments

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 05/08/2008 12:33:00

. This is a very vigorous climber, better known as Russian vine or mile-a-minute. Only the very brave will plant this in a small garden as, although it's undoubtedly attractive and flowers for a long time, it has an unquenchable curiosity. Many years ago I


Aching for annuals

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

, endlessly flowery) and Nicotiana sylvestris, which looks slightly spectral and smells delicious in the evenings. The third is the irrepressible Nigella that seeds itself in the gravel under my pergola.The other two are climbers. The first is Ipomoea purpurea


Hopper and crawler

By Richard Jones on 24/10/2007 09:46:49

doubted that we would ever get frogs or toads in there, but south-east London amphibians have turned out to be remarkably good climbers.I've yet to see a toad up there, but every year we get frogs sploshing about and since 2005 we've also had common newts


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