London (change)
Today 19°C / 12°C
Tomorrow 17°C / 12°C
Keywords:
Sort by:

1 to 10 of 15 results

Categories

Unassigned (15)

Authors

James Alexander-Sinclair (7)
Richard Jones (6)
Adam Pasco (1)
Pippa Greenwood (1)

Date Range

More than 12 months (15)

Related Searches

Crazy about colchicums

By Pippa Greenwood on 18/10/2007 10:19:35

I don't like to brag but, wow my colchicums are gorgeous. Yet again, despite the fact that they live on a very steep, very on the edge spot, they are stunning. I planted them shortly after we moved here, some ten or more years ago and each


Blanket weed in garden ponds

By Richard Jones on 03/09/2008 13:57:00

After the frantic time of summer holidays, when it's as much as I can do to remember to mow the lawn occasionally or throw a bucket of water on anything that's drooped dangerously, we are edging back to the normal routines of work, school and ... a


Hedges and topiary

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 13/05/2008 12:38:00

and kept below their normal height. They're not much good if you're looking for flowers, but for sheer well-cut elegance you can't really go wrong. You know the sort of thing: yew hedges with razor edges, parasols of pleached lime and frost-dusted box


Dianthus: In the pink

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 02/09/2008 13:56:00

, but then she also grew a lot of other things universally regarded as supremely tasteful and fashionable. Dianthus make a very charming edging plant with lots of colour (provided you like pink) and most of them are fabulously scented. If you don't like pink


Late-summer flowers

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 09/09/2008 13:56:00

curtains (bear with me, this sort of makes sense). Midsummer borders would be all brocade and swags and ferluffles, while late-summer curtains would be a lot simpler and probably with a few spiders' webs along the edges.I think, perhaps, it's time


A scorched lawn

By Adam Pasco on 22/09/2008 14:56:00

the initial dose of lawn chemical in the wheeled applicator far too high. It wasn't until a day or two later that a particularly dark stripe started appearing. And of course this wasn't out of sight at the edge, but right down the middle of the lawn! I tried


A poke in the eye

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 30/10/2007 09:01:02

in clean water so probably still a bit risky!A great plant for the edge of a woodland or a large border although it does tend to seed itself in inappropriate places. The American Constitution was written in ink made from the berries of Pokeweed.


In the bleak midwater

By Richard Jones on 06/08/2008 13:35:00

fences to prevent the geese from trampling some of the newly planted edges. And what's this hawking over the water surface? An emperor dragonfly, Anax imperator. Things are looking up.Maybe the heron will be a regular visitor. Nearby Dulwich Park has a


Butterflies: meadow browns and gatekeepers

By Richard Jones on 23/07/2008 12:27:00

, on the edge of meadows, while the meadow browns prefer fluttering across swathes of long grass.Whatever the reason, they're very obvious in the garden this week, because they're mating and they spend many minutes, or even hours, 'in copula'. One pair sat


Sparrows in Paris

By Richard Jones on 23/04/2008 10:57:00

the densely populated 12eme arrondissement?Something occurs to me. Are the houses of south-east London no longer attractive for nesting in the eaves? What with roof insulation and loft conversions, perhaps the birds are being edged out? Ironically, the five


1 to 10 of 15 results
Search time: 0.014 secs