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To chop or not to chop?

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 28/10/2008 12:26:17

Do you have an autumn clear-up in your garden? Do you cut down all your herbaceous stuff so that everything is tidy for the winter or do you leave everything until the new year? Most people nowadays leave it until later to give food for small birds


Moles and molehills

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 25/08/2009 16:31:35

I don't believe it. I am incandescent with spluttering indignation. For the first time ever a molehill has appeared on my lawn.We've lived here for about 15 years. Before that the garden was a concrete farmyard, so this particular mole


Moles revisited

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 07/12/2009 13:19:52

You might remember my blog a few months back, in which I described the appearance of a mole in my garden. The garden is situated in an old farmyard, surrounded on all four sides by buildings. The offending mole is now racing all over the place


Snow plants

By Kate Bradbury on 07/01/2010 16:25:39

Oh snow, where were you in London on Christmas day? Why are you here now, hampering our efforts to burn off mince pies through brisk gardening? There's nothing I can do in my garden, except ponder when the compost heap will start breaking down again


Gardening to reduce your carbon footprint

By Kate Bradbury on 29/01/2010 17:20:48

is an obvious choice: native British trees don't just absorb CO2, but provide food and shelter for wildlife. Composting helps reduce the amount of waste being sent to landfill and journeys to take it there, and growing your own fruit and veg reduces food waste


Carol Klein: Life in a Cottage Garden

By Adam Pasco on 10/01/2011 16:47:04

With such a dull, damp and dismal start to the year, I didn't feel very motivated to venture into my garden. That all changed last Friday as I watched Carol Klein's new series, Life in a Cottage Garden, documenting her gardening year at Glebe


Wind and rain damage in the garden

By Pippa Greenwood on 28/11/2012 10:37:28

Living on a hillside, I’m fortunately not in danger of being flooded, but it doesn’t mean I’m not feeling the effects of the recent heavy rains. It’s difficult to walk around my sloping garden without slipping over, and the grassed areas have turned


Cleaning the greenhouse

By Pippa Greenwood on 09/01/2013 13:02:50

the greenhouse at this time of year, composting or binning any winter plant casualties. Somehow after Christmas I always feel mentally tougher and better able to throw out plants I should have binned long since.Seed packets that are way past their sell-by date


Gardening clothes

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 29/01/2008 10:57:00

maintained a certain decorum - ties, waistcoats and (for the head gardener) a black hat and heavy fob watch. Not for them a pair of holey jeans and a sweater grimy with compost and dusted with spilled rooting powder.Nowadays anything goes. I have laid a patio


Mulch, mulch, mulch

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 19/02/2008 10:54:00

anything too deeply - especially plants like this violet that is making the effort to grow already.As I have said before I make a lot of compost here but there is never enough to mulch the whole garden so, every other year I buy a trailer load of the stuff


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