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James Alexander-Sinclair (6)
Adam Pasco (2)
Pippa Greenwood (2)
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No fly zone

By Richard Jones on 31/10/2007 09:16:49

as to defoliate small trees. I have enough trouble keeping the rose sawfly caterpillars at bay, so I've moved Mrs vapourer and her brood to the end of the garden. Perhaps they can attack the bramble that grows over the fence from next door and threatens to engulf


Great value dahlias

By Adam Pasco on 20/08/2007 10:58:02

Rose Shades (from Mr Fothergill's seeds), producing a simple, single rosette in shades of rose pink. They only grow to about 45cm, so I've planted them closely to form a carpet between some standard Bonica roses in a complimentary shade. The marvellous


Seed potatoes and mice

By Pippa Greenwood on 06/03/2008 11:29:00

I've only just got around to chitting seed potatoes. Many of this year's spuds were given to me for my birthday by my kids in February. I normally chit them in the greenhouse, but after last year's potato massacre I felt that putting the tubers rose


Jack Frost nipping at your nose

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 21/12/2007 17:20:00

unexpected like the tawny leaves of beech with ruffles of ice, or the stems of roses which suddenly grow three times as many thorns.There are all sorts of winter treasures to find out there in the frost - not just in your gardens but in parks, hedgerows


Plants growing above the Arctic Circle

By Pippa Greenwood on 21/08/2008 13:03:00

't be a problem. Fantastic if you could grow roses so far north. Still, beautiful as the scenery was, I'd not swap it for our variable and often excessively wet climate, with all its rewards of tasty, tender veg we've been enjoying since our return!


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


The last dance - grasses in autumn

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 30/09/2008 14:25:00

admiringly at roses and bob deferentially to paeonies. One of my favourite combinations is Geum 'Mrs J. Bradshaw' with Stipa tenuissima.As we reach the dog days the grasses step from the shadows and become stars. I could drone on for ages but I'll give you


Octoberfest

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 09/10/2007 11:38:02

, the occasional rose clings on, the Sedum has sprawled and the seed catalogues thud onto the doormat (postal strikes permitting).It is the most relaxed time in the garden not just because the plants are semi-comatose but also because there is not a lot to do


Quiet beginnings

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 28/12/2007 15:14:04

), climbers that need support (like roses) and shrubs that can be persuaded to do what you tell them to do (like ceanothus).I decided on the pyracantha (a variety called 'Mojave') and chose to grow it into quite disciplined espaliers. Ten years later


Mulching with compost

By Adam Pasco on 02/06/2008 13:10:00

... round shrubs, roses and flowers, along the base of the hedge, around fruit trees and bushes, and over the veg plot. Beans get a good, deep mulch of compost to help conserve soil moisture, too, but it's not just water retention that mulching is good for


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