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Colourful camellias

By Adam Pasco on 30/03/2009 17:28:12

the beds, filling them with ericaceous compost that I knew acid-loving plants would love. One bed provides a home to a much loved Rhododendron yakushimanum that was a gift to me on leaving a rhododendron nursery I worked at. By filling the beds with bags


Ferns in pots

By Adam Pasco on 24/11/2008 14:47:42

as required.For planting things that are going to live their life in a pot I always choose a loam-based John Innes No.3 compost. The loam gives it the guts to last, along with longer-lasting nutrients. There's no harm in mixing in some water-retaining gel


Begonias

By Adam Pasco on 25/03/2008 14:10:00

distraction. Last autumn I stopped watering my begonias and left the plants to die down on their own, thinking their tubers could safely overwinter in pots of dry compost. How wrong I was. I've just tipped some out to replant into fresh compost but discovered


Foxgloves

By Adam Pasco on 28/07/2008 13:23:00

-seeded readily. Once they've flowered, the seed heads ripen and split, scattering their contents onto the soil below. I've rested pots of compost around them to catch the seed in the past, or it can just be collected by hand.Freshly sown foxglove seeds germinate


Dealing with a waterlogged garden

By Adam Pasco on 26/11/2012 16:26:00

to dig, spread a thick layer of compost, manure or composted green waste (like peat-free compost) over the soil surface. Worms will gradually work this in and the surface layer acts as a mulch to deter the germination of annual weeds.On the veg plot, I


Leaf fall

By Adam Pasco on 26/11/2007 10:12:02

have to repeat the process several times.The autumn free fall is a real bonus. Leaves rot down into gorgeous compost, so I'll make the most of my free supply. On lawns they're easy to collect. I simply raise the cutting height on my mower blades


Growing trees in pots

By Adam Pasco on 12/05/2008 12:02:00

terracotta pot for about six years now. Like any permanent planting I used John Innes No.3 loam-based potting compost, as trees need compost with real guts. Even so you'll need to feed them - my acer gets a weekly liquid feed through summer along with all


Calla lily

By Adam Pasco on 11/08/2008 12:10:00

, loam-based compost, a warm position, and once they're growing you must make sure their compost never dries out. This is one pot plant I don't think you can overwater.Many varieties have wonderful speckled leaves, while others have dark leaf stalks


Shed clearance

By Adam Pasco on 05/01/2009 16:02:44

of cane (getting ever shorter as their ends break), lengths of hosepipe, wire, old compost bags, half-empty seed packets… You name it, I probably have it in my shed. Finding it, though, is another matter.I can hardly get in the door now — entering the shed


Growing strawberry plants

By Adam Pasco on 09/03/2009 14:03:21

-based John Innes compost. Strawberries are perennials, so can continue yielding fruit for many years. They also produce extra runners, which can be pegged down into fresh pots of compost, fruiting the following year.Cold-stored strawberry runners


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