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Peonies

By Adam Pasco on 19/05/2008 11:00:00

gardener needs, but as soon as those big, bold blooms open it's bound to rain and shatter the petals. In the blink of an eye it's all over and I've got to wait another year for them to flower again.My problem is that I love plants, and have to admit


Spring blossom on fruit trees

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 22/04/2008 12:14:02

).But I digress: back to blossom. The purpose of blossom (as I'm sure you know) is to attract pollinators and therefore to produce fruit. However, it's also very lovely in its own right. Not all of the trees are yet in flower, but at the moment we can


Plants on railway embankments

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 05/08/2008 12:33:00

. This is a very vigorous climber, better known as Russian vine or mile-a-minute. Only the very brave will plant this in a small garden as, although it's undoubtedly attractive and flowers for a long time, it has an unquenchable curiosity. Many years ago I


They're off!

By Jane Moore on 12/09/2007 10:56:00

of flowers and now I'm getting some beans at long last. If you're suddenly overwhelmed by beans Delia's got a lovely chutney recipe.This year, we're growing a variety that I've wanted to try for years. It's beautifully named 'Painted Lady' and it appeals


Spring blossom - blackthorn

By Pippa Greenwood on 20/03/2008 11:32:00

I love the delicate flowers of prunus, although I'm not so keen on the blowsier, pink varieties I sometimes see in other gardens. The smaller, more delicate spring blossom hits the spot for me.Like most gardeners, I also have a nose for a bargain


Potatoes, broccoli and bumblebees

By Jane Moore on 23/05/2008 16:02:05

produced flower buds and the purple-sprouting broccoli which was cropping fabulously only a couple of weeks ago has gone to flower.It seems only a couple of weeks ago that I was harvesting tight clusters of purple-sprouting for the steamer but almost


Beetles, wasps and toads

By Richard Jones on 04/06/2008 11:12:00

and widespread, but more an insect of rough flowery grassland, verges, meadows and commons than of domestic gardens. The larvae burrow in plant stems, but only wild flowers so it's never a pest. It's easy to see how this noble-looking beetle got its scientific


Six plants for a new garden

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 19/08/2008 12:33:00

and the singed toffee-coloured flowers are so subtle that they seem to only whisper (but such seductive words that the heart melts).Phlox 'Blue Paradise': I think these are the very best of the family. A sort of washed denim colour that changes with the light


Aching for annuals

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 23/09/2008 12:34:00

, morning glory, which covers a great expanse of wall outside the kitchen. I like to go out every morning to count the flowers: on a warm day they are all gone by lunchtime. The other is Cobaea scandens, which grows happily out of a pot putting out pretty


The benefits of the sunflower

By Pippa Greenwood on 25/10/2007 10:38:35

they produce. You get huge height, fabulous, huge flowers and then a mathematically desirable fibbonacci series display of sunflower seeds that will now be enjoyed by wild birds for weeks to come. Many of the seeds have already been eaten by my daughter


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