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James Alexander-Sinclair (86)

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Growing pumpkins

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 24/10/2011 18:29:09

. But I love pumpkin curry, pumpkin soup or even just mashed pumpkin with bacon.We grow three varieties. The first is a big orange number called ‘Vif d’Etampes’. It keeps well into the winter, but once cut we have to eat it for at least a week. The second


Growing herbs

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 08/11/2010 16:30:07

taste delicious and are much loved by Jekka's dog, and her extensive collection of myrtles. It is always fascinating to visit a proper growing nursery where you can see the plants at every stage, from little baby seedlings to the larger plants


Growing gunnera

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 26/09/2011 16:57:53

at RHS Garden Rosemoor, growing on the edge of a pond. It is well worth a trip to these lovely gardens in Devon to see it (and at this time of year there is the bonus of watching the apple harvest there.)I first saw Gunnera manicata when I was a small boy


Growing eryngiums

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 18/07/2011 11:30:48

about eryngiums in the ‘We love’ pages of the July 2011 edition. I would like, if I may, to expand on that a bit and introduce you to a few more.I love eryngiums: they are about the only plants that manage to be architectural, delicate, pretty


Growing bamboo

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 12/04/2011 17:47:57

- very striking swollen nodes on the culms. Only small at 1.5m with arching foliage.Fargesia murieliae - forms dense, arching clumps of very leafy canes. Spectacular on a terrace where the rustling and swaying becomes more mesmerising


Growing sweet peas

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 20/06/2011 17:47:30

to the sweet pea.The best I can find is a cowboy song that was a hit in 1966 "Sweet pea / Apple of my eye /  Don't know when and I don't know why". Nice but not exactly horticulturally relevant.*Anyway, sweet peas are flowering now. Lathyrus odoratus


Growing Russian vine

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 21/11/2011 16:07:14

by this plant: on the surface it is an excellent idea - fast growing, popular with bees, long flowering (it will happily perform for months) and reliably tough in all situations. However, it is also as untameable as a coach load of Visigoths on the razzle


Growing alliums: best varieties

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 29/08/2011 10:10:25

m, flowers May/June.Allium 'Globemaster': a huge and spectacular mauvey number, with tight packed petals. Height 0.8m, flowers May/June.Allium hollandicum: probably the most popular variety. Dark purple, perky tennis ball sized flowerheads. Height 1m


'Grow Your Own' Week: Forest gardening

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 29/03/2010 10:24:02

Good morning and happy 'Grow Your Own' Week to you all.There are, I have to admit, many other gardeners who are hotter on vegetable growing than me. Give me herbaceous borders and I can muddle through and make them look pretty good, but when


Liquidambar: plant this tree

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 04/11/2008 09:15:14

smaller (only about 10m) and more slow-growing tree, try L. styraciflua 'Moonbeam'. It has creamy yellow young leaves that turn green as the summer progresses before transforming into fine colour.Best to ignore the variegated varieties as they are, I think


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