London (change)
Today 22°C / 17°C
Tomorrow 24°C / 16°C
Keywords:
Sort by:


Flowers checklist

By Gardeners' World on 23/11/2011 12:55:13

Clear faded growth of golden hops and annual climbers from pergolas and trellisPlant bare-root roses in well-prepared soilTransplant shrubs and conifers that have outgrown their positionCut down chrysanthemums to soil level after floweringMake leaf


Flowers checklist

By Gardeners' World on 23/11/2011 12:55:30

Make last-minute pickings of fresh flowers for the houseSpread compost on to flower beds for worms to work in over winterCollect fallen leaves showing signs of blackspot from around rosesFork compost into borders, but take care not to spike emerging


Flowers checklist

By Gardeners' World on 23/11/2011 12:55:17

Prune wisteria sideshoots to 10-15cm from their base, and tie in leading shoots to create a frameworkRake up fallen leaves that could be sheltering slugsCut down dead perennialsPlant bareroot trees and deciduous hedges such as beech and privet


Flowers checklist

By Gardeners' World on 23/11/2011 12:55:26

sheltered spot if conditions turn very coldTake root cuttings of oriental poppies and other perennialsLook for early-flowering snowdrops to pot up and bring into the housePrepare soil well before planting new rosesCover branches of holly berries with netting


Flowering rhubarb

By Pippa Greenwood on 08/05/2008 12:56:00

I'm rather fond of rhubarb, preferably under a thick blanket of butter crumble or stewed with a dollop of organic vanilla ice-cream.We normally have a great crop from our organic kitchen garden, but this year my rhubarb plants are producing flowers


Strawberry flowers

By Pippa Greenwood on 07/05/2009 16:17:47

.He planted them out in a fresh, well-manured bed and wow, do they look good! The plants have produced lots of healthy foliage and plenty of flowers. But all is not good. A late frost hit some of the pretty blooms right where it hurts. The petals look fine


Frost on flowers

By Adam Pasco on 25/02/2008 10:12:00

The early bird... gets very cold trying to photograph flowers in the frost. The weather this past week has been chilly in my neck of the woods, but frost brings its own beauty to our gardens. Frost is an ephemeral beauty that melts with the rising


Repeat-flowering

By Gardeners' World on 14/09/2007 16:57:24

See Remontant.


Double-flowered

By Gardeners' World on 14/09/2007 16:57:05

Flowers with many more than the normal complement of petals. Blooms with only slightly more than the single amount are termed semi-double. Fully double-flowers are sterile, as the stamens have been replaced by the extra petals.


Valentine's Day flowers

By Kate Bradbury on 11/02/2011 13:18:56

with such jewels of summer.These unseasonal blooms were likely grown in far flung places such as Africa or South America and flown over to the UK. Those with fewer 'flower miles' will have been raised in giant heated greenhouses closer to home. Cut flowers are big


Search time: 0.017 secs