London (change)
Today 10°C / 6°C
Tomorrow 9°C / 6°C
Keywords:
Sort by:

9 results returned

Garden habitats for frogs

By Kate Bradbury on 01/04/2011 16:12:06

I seem to have created the perfect habitat for my frogs. It's not a large garden, marsh or meadow, but a tatty grow bag from last year, screened by willow edging and topped with dead foliage. It's an absolute eyesore and I hate it, but to my frogs


Tidying your garden in autumn

By Kate Bradbury on 15/10/2010 15:03:14

of long grass around the edges of the lawn (which has no straight lines or clipped edges). I’m also far too soft with my frogs. When I cut down my tomato haulms the other week, I found five frogs snuggled together in the grow bag. I couldn’t bear to turf


Vine weevil control

By Kate Bradbury on 23/04/2010 17:26:50

Last week I found vine weevils on the rim of the pot my orange tree lives in. It stands next to my 'nursery' of seedlings, so potentially hundreds of plants could be affected. The adults cause little damage, save for a few nibbles on the edges


Growing a yew hedge

By Kate Bradbury on 25/01/2013 12:54:24

Two years, I felt the need to grow a local, native plant in my garden. I gathered rosehips from a field rose at the edge of a nearby canal, soaked them in water and sowed the seed in coarse compost.The pots sat in a corner of my patio, doing nothing


Green manure

By Kate Bradbury on 06/10/2010 13:18:18

before it’s flowered, but I can’t help leaving a few around the edge to provide food for wildlife.I hate seeing bare earth in my garden. If I expose the soil I sow a few seeds of red clover on the surface, which germinate quickly and provide some ground


Gardening for bats

By Kate Bradbury on 22/07/2011 16:56:22

at the edge of the water in total darkness with bats swirling around me.Like so much of our wildlife, bats are having a hard time. This is mostly due to the widespread use of pesticides in agriculture. British bats feed exclusively on insects, so spraying


Growing auriculas

By Kate Bradbury on 22/03/2013 11:38:54

, including gold- and light-centred alpines, green-edged fancies and a few selfs. We're not fussy about choosing particular named varieties, but we tend to steer clear of doubles. Auriculas, part of the primula family, make great hobby plants. There are so


Pond plants

By Kate Bradbury on 26/02/2010 16:23:36

, non-native pond plants. Is anyone else confused?My pond sits under a north-facing wall and is less than 1m squared in size. It has no edges as such, and sits above ground. It currently contains water forget-me-not (Myosotis scorpiodes) and some rampant


Guerrilla gardening and wildlife

By Kate Bradbury on 19/11/2010 16:27:42

source has been added to an existing shelter. Indeed, in her presentation, Jan Miller didn’t call for an end to guerrilla gardening; she suggested that the edges of neglected areas could be planted, leaving the centres undisturbed to provide shelter


9 results returned
Search time: 0.021 secs