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Gardeners' musings (24)

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James Alexander-Sinclair (13)
Adam Pasco (7)
Kate Bradbury (3)
Jane Moore (1)

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More than 12 months (24)

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Gardening injuries

By Kate Bradbury on 30/07/2010 17:57:23

are often higher than those for sports like football and rugby.Gardening injuries are horribly common. They normally happen in spring, when the first sunny day of the year inspires hours of weeding, pruning and digging after a winter of sitting on the sofa


Squirrels

By Adam Pasco on 05/11/2007 11:03:02

What's up with the squirrels in my garden? Why can't they stick to the peanut feeders and keep off my lawn! For the past few weeks they've been relentlessly digging holes here, there, everywhere in my lawn.I think they're burying walnuts collected


Mulch, mulch, mulch

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

In the words of Benny Hill: "I'll never know how a rose can smell so sweet and pure, And hold its head up high when it's standing in manure!".Old Benny cannot have been much of a gardener (a statement borne out by the fact that he lived all his life


Bindweed

By Adam Pasco on 10/08/2009 14:20:14

place after dandelions and horsetail), and bindweed came 2nd to dandelions in northern England. Full results of our survey of weeds and other garden problems can be found in the August 2009 issue of Gardeners' World Magazine.


Persistent weeds

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 26/02/2008 10:54:00

. Garden twine where, if you open the cellophane package the wrong way then the loose end becomes strangely elusive. All of these things are certain to put me in a very bad mood.Not so tangles of weeds; I rather enjoy the gradual teasing and tickling


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


Suppressing weeds with carpet

By Jane Moore on 29/02/2008 11:27:00

to weed nicely contained beds where the soil is lovely and light, and I barely even get muddy.Laying carpet at the far end was a big mistake. I initially laid it over the soil to suppress weed growth, with the view to digging the area over later on


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


Shed clearance

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

, and find those handy bits of cane or wire should I ever need them.I know I’ll feel better once the job is done, and then I could perhaps set about emptying out the compost bins, finishing the winter digging and tidying up behind the greenhouse. Just one


A snow-covered garden

By Adam Pasco on 09/02/2009 15:45:38

Has the snow been a good or bad thing for our gardens? Well, probably a bit of both, but I do live in hope that the cold weather has helped kill off a few garden pests. We've all had our fair share of snow over the past couple of weeks, with varying


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