London (change)
Today 19°C / 13°C
Tomorrow 16°C / 9°C
Keywords:
Sort by:

1 to 10 of 43 results

Categories

Gardeners' musings (43)

Authors

James Alexander-Sinclair (15)
Adam Pasco (14)
Kate Bradbury (9)
Pippa Greenwood (4)
Jane Moore (1)

Date Range

More than 12 months (43)

Related Searches

Wormery composters

By Adam Pasco on 30/11/2009 16:55:12

What wonderful creatures composting worms are. I first set up my wormery compost container about 15 years ago, and it has been converting kitchen waste into compost ever since. Unlike traditional compost bins where you simply pile in and mix-up your


Christmas compost

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 18/12/2007 10:20:00

that one of the most satisfying things in gardening is a well built, well maintained compost heap, but it is a bit much when people get smug about what is really just a pile of rotting vegetation. I do not claim to be an expert but what we make ends up


Composting in winter

By Kate Bradbury on 17/12/2010 16:26:51

I don’t think my garden could look any worse. The borders I left to rot into themselves have tumbled all over the lawn, the patio is covered in pigeon poo, and there’s now a temporary cardboard compost bin outside my back door because the real bin


Worm composting all year round

By Adam Pasco on 17/10/2011 16:18:13

compost to improve my soil, sprinkling it around newly planted bulbs and divided perennials. And with the cost of gardening forever on the increase I'll save a small fortune on bags of soil improvers and compost from the garden centre.


Recycling in the garden

By Adam Pasco on 19/04/2010 12:11:05

of soil conditioning compost or manure costs at the garden centre this spring?


Rats in the garden

By Kate Bradbury on 10/12/2010 16:08:44

, restaurants, and - ahem - bird tables.I'm not sure how I'd feel if I attracted rats to my garden. I don't mind them (that is to say, I'm not offended by their existence) and I'd never kill one, but I wouldn't like them in my garden (it's only 4m², after all


Bonsai trees

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 16/06/2008 14:12:00

) was of a Chinese juniper 1.5m tall and 3.5m wide growing in a small, overcrowded garden. Over a period of years it was dug up, pruned and replanted until it fitted into a pot. The whole process took about a quarter of a century and is far from over.The art


Watering greenhouse plants

By Adam Pasco on 27/06/2011 12:24:44

attentive to plants, especially those in pots, baskets and growing bags. If compost is allowed to dry out plants soon suffer, and then the damage is done.Working gardeners away from home all day need to adopt growing plans that take the strain out


Pumpkins for Halloween

By Kate Bradbury on 23/10/2009 15:13:22

for ages. I remember being a very confused three-year-old when, in April, my dad started digging a huge hole in the garden "for Halloween", which seemed an awfully long way off. It transpired that the holes would be filled with well-rotted compost, over


Garden bonfires: ashes to ashes

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 18/11/2008 11:12:37

've resisted burning much in the way of garden refuse as I compost everything I can.Once a year I rent a great big shredder for a weekend and the peace of the countryside is completely disrupted as I spend a couple of happy days half-deafened and covered


1 to 10 of 43 results
Search time: 0.022 secs