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James Alexander-Sinclair (4)
Adam Pasco (3)

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More than 12 months (7)

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Calla lily

By Adam Pasco on 11/08/2008 12:10:00

down gradually by reducing watering in autumn, then overwinter their tubers to replant next spring.Calla lilies have a tongue-twister of a botanical name: Zantedeschia. They grow from dormant tubers (well I think that's what they are). They need a good


Snail attack

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 17/07/2007 09:38:02

In two large pots I am growing big white lilies (lets not talk about the dapper scarlet lily beetles and their repulsively slimy offspring at the moment - too depressing) and a luscious deep red dahlia called Arabian Night. Around the feet


Agapanthus seed heads

By Adam Pasco on 13/10/2008 15:18:00

bulbs (including lilies) can take at least three years and often longer to grow into plants of flowering size.Then there's the anticipation of the unexpected, as the resulting plants may be a result of cross pollination with other varieties, so not grow


Organic pest control

By Adam Pasco on 28/09/2007 09:10:01

Parts of my garden have resembled something of a battleground this year. Why is it that all my favourite plants and crops have their very own pest to contend with? Grow lilies and you'll be hard pressed not to find lily beetle munching them. My


Slugs and snails and puppy dogs' tails

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 05/02/2008 11:14:00

ladybird. The rest are the usual suspects: vine weevils (No.3 on the list), lily beetles (No.9) etc.No matter how depressed we may get with cushion scale (No.4=) or the depredations of berberis sawfly (No.7) there is always a silver lining. There are worse


My favourite irises

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 03/06/2008 13:21:00

This is prime iris season: a few weeks when these hugely flamboyant flowers come into their own. I grow two different sorts of iris in my garden: the Siberian iris and the bearded iris. Siberian irises are smaller flowered, have thinner leaves


Bugs and daylilies

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 01/07/2008 12:07:00

. The first is relatively straightforward: the mullein moth caterpillar. These are stripy chaps that start quite skinny, but rapidly become as fat as witchity grubs by eating verbascum leaves at a terrifying rate. I grow the gorgeous Verbascum bombyciferum


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