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11 to 16 of 16 results

Raspberry beetle

By Pippa Greenwood on 31/07/2009 10:31:51

show recently, and 80% of the questions people asked me were about their poorly raspberries. I only grow autumn-fruiting varieties at home, which normally avoid attentions of raspberry beetle, but the early berries have been affected. So I wasn’t too


Grow Yourself Healthy: July

By Adam Pasco on 04/07/2011 16:10:16

fruits.Both greenhouse and garden are developing well, proving yet again just how much fresh produce can be grown in our gardens. And that's the aim of our Grow Yourself Healthy campaign, to show people how a little planning can turn their gardens


Unseasonal weather

By Kate Bradbury on 11/11/2011 12:39:58

, according to Chief Horticultural Advisor Guy Barter. The growing season is getting longer, and plants are simply taking advantage.I don't know if my spring-flowering cherry is blooming late, or early. But not only is it in flower, it's also produced a second


Grow Yourself Healthy: May jobs

By Adam Pasco on 16/05/2011 16:46:02

Things really move up a gear in May when you're growing your own. With a greenhouse bulging at the seams, I can't wait for the risk of frosty nights to pass so I can plant them outside.Tomatoes, courgettes, sweetcorn and other tender crops


Mulberry trees

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 12/08/2008 12:07:00

I wonder how many of you out there grow mulberry trees? Probably not enough of you. I have vivid memories of the first mulberry tree I came across in the grounds of a big old house in Surrey.My recollection is not one of the great horticultural


Identifying bumblebees

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:32:31

is to blame, with wild areas of farmland sacrificed for bigger yields. Bumblebees now have fewer nesting opportunities and flowers to feed from.Grow a range of flowering plants all year - especially from March to November when bees are most active - to provide


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