London (change)
Today 24°C / 16°C
Tomorrow 20°C / 14°C
Keywords:
Sort by:

201 to 210 of 238 results

Late-summer colour

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:33:04

. Don't overlook ornamental grasses, which can lift a border into the designer league. And don't forget to grow a few spare plants in pots, so you can slot them into gaps that may appear in a scheme.A diverse choiceAlso known as montbretia


Find out your soil type

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:38:09

Soil typesYour soil type - sandy, loam or clay - determines which plant species you can grow. Knowing your soil type enables to you to choose the plants best suited to your garden. Soil type is identified the presence of clay, sand and silt


How to create a summer hanging basket

By Gardeners' World on 20/07/2011 17:39:06

Osteospermum 'Tresco Purple' and rosy Diascia 'Red Ace' although any crimson or maroon trailing bedding plant would work well.1 Ipomoea 'Sweet Caroline'3 Calibrachoa 'Million Bells Cherry'1 Osteospermum 'Tresco Purple'6 Diascia 'Red Ace'36cm metalware basket


...and so to bed

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 25/09/2007 10:32:02

-lizzies but will always defend your right to grow them.Parks, however, are a different matter and everybody is allowed an opinion.I was pondering this subject while I was loafing around Paris last week in perfect weather and wandered into the Jardins de Luxembourg


Shrubs for patio pots

By Adam Pasco on 17/12/2007 11:01:00

I'm always looking for plants that make an impact - things that will grab the attention and put on a good show. Seasonal bedding and bulbs are always popular, but many shrubs also grow well in patio pots.Over the years I've tried all sorts, from


Moth orchid

By Adam Pasco on 14/01/2008 11:12:00

. For the same price as your vase of red roses that within a week are only fit for the compost heap, you could instead grow orchids on your windowsill, which carry a succession of flowers for three months.If that wasn't enough, it will even flower again about six


Buying lily bulbs

By Adam Pasco on 19/01/2009 12:16:13

bulb was planted straight away in its own 20cm pot. These were grown on in my unheated greenhouse for a few months as I watched each produce a tall stem tipped with flower buds, before I planted them out in a group. The resulting lily 'forest', pictured


Nectaroscordum of the gods

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 05/05/2009 18:04:09

A few weeks ago I wrote about the redesign of part of my garden. It's going well — thank you for asking. One of the plants I mentioned was Nectaroscordum siculum, which I think merits a blog of its own, as it's one of my very favourite plants


Cow parsley

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 12/05/2009 13:34:49

Absence will always make the heart grow fonder: especially in gardens. I have just got back after a few days at the Malvern Spring Show — which was, as always, great fun, pretty fabulous and completely exhausting — and it is amazing how much fuller


Poppies and suchlike

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 16/06/2009 15:36:24

from a friend and scatter them around the garden - don't try and grow them in pots as they hate having their roots disturbed.


201 to 210 of 238 results
Search time: 0.041 secs