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What to do now in your garden - week 45

By Gardeners' World on 31/10/2011 11:15:10

constructed, the box should last for years and provide a cosy home for generations of birds.Add old crops and bedding to the compost heapSpike lawns then brush grit into the holesCollect seeds from beans and sweet peas to sow next yearAround the gardenCut late


Eastern European vegetable varieties

By Lila Das Gupta on 18/02/2010 16:06:41

Catalogue has been listing obscure varieties like melon 'Collective Farm Woman' from Ukraine for years. The company operated as a 'seed club' to get round regulations, but it's only now that eastern European seed varieties are making an impact


Create a cup and saucer vine pot display

By Gardeners' World on 22/07/2011 15:22:38

of patrolling and pick them off by handMore on growing climbersHow to grow annual climbers from seedCreate a sweet pea pot displayGrow morning glory in a containerGrow Spanish flag in a potConservatory climber plant collectionEvergreen climber plant collection


How to grow pulses indoors

By Gardeners' World on 20/07/2011 11:09:09

three to four days.AdamIf you get the sprouting bug, many of the seed catalogues, such as Suttons and Kings Seeds, sell a range of suitable pulses.Growing plants indoorsGrowing a peanut plant - video project with Rachel de ThameSarah Raven gives advice


What to do now in your garden - week 43

By Gardeners' World on 31/10/2011 11:14:45

be sheltering slugs and snailsAround the gardenCollect seed from allium and sow straight awayPlant evergreen shrubs and conifer hedgesCarefully dig up gladioli corms FlowersKeep harvesting root veg such as beetroot and carrotsOrder fruit trees and bushes


Essentials for growing under cover

By Daniel Haynes on 16/01/2013 15:31:56

A greenhouse or polytunnel allows you to grow a wider range of plants, and extends the growing season. Once the structure is in place you'll need to kit it out with a few essential items, listed below.You’ll have more success raising your own seeds


Hardy annuals

By Adam Pasco on 06/04/2009 17:31:44

of weeding won't go amiss).Many hardy annuals also generously set seed. Either collect seed or let it fall onto the soil around and you'll have more flowers next year for free.So, what's your favourite annual?


Snails

By Gardeners' World on 19/10/2011 11:11:05

, such as paving. It too, leaves a tell-tale trail of slime at the scene of the crime.Irregular holes chewed in leaves, stems eaten away and the plant collapses, flowerbuds and seedlings eaten, seeds fail to grow having been eaten as soon as they germinated


Snails and song thrushes in the garden

By Adam Pasco on 08/03/2010 14:58:51

, and you'll see what I mean. Feeders provide seed and peanuts for birds all-year-round. Plants with fruits and berries are grown to provide birds with fresh pickings - especially my cherries and soft fruits, where I'm sometime lucky to get a look in! Apple


How to create an annual climber pot display

By Gardeners' World on 22/07/2011 15:24:21

that the stems don't break in the wind and have space to grow.AdamWatch our for cabbage white butterflies and wipe off any eggs they lay on the Canary creeper's leavesMore on growing climbersHow to grow annual climbers from seedCreate a sweet pea pot display


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