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Weeds and wildlife

By Richard Jones on 14/05/2008 12:51:00

animals are transient, they come, they go; but wild plants ... they come, they stay, they get in the way, they interfere, and they compete with the flowers and vegetables we choose to grow. I think this attitude to 'weeds' is grossly unfair, so here


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


Great value dahlias

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

A bed of dwarf bedding dahlias I grew from seed three years ago has grown back and bloomed again better than ever this summer. Talk about great value! The more dahlias I grow from seed the more I appreciate them. The original seed variety was Mignon


Crop rotation

By Jane Moore on 07/03/2008 11:50:00

draw up a crop rotation plan. I actually drew a rough outline of where I was going to grow this year's crops in the autumn, before putting in the onions and garlic. Typically, I never got around to finishing it off.My crop rotation plan comprises a


Picking blackberries

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 16/09/2008 12:34:00

It's blackberry time - not those machines, without which many "suits" would feel emasculated, but fat berries swollen by rain and aching for crumble. The blackberry bramble is a weed, and the perfect example of a plant simply growing in the wrong


They're off!

By Jane Moore on 12/09/2007 10:56:00

and snails paid them a great deal of attention - a lot more than Lizzy and me - and the cold, damp weather seemed to stop them in their tracks. If you need some tips on growing beans take a look at the rhs website.They just sat there for weeks, getting


Daffodils in May

By Pippa Greenwood on 22/05/2008 11:00:00

This week at the Chelsea Flower Show there are thousands of gardeners admiring out of season daffodil blooms in the show gardens and floral exhibits.In order to get their daffodils blooming at this time of year, growers force the bulbs to grow using


Mullein moth caterpillars

By Pippa Greenwood on 10/07/2008 13:13:00

and buddleja.The caterpillars can destroy plants' foliage in a matter of days and can literally be seen to swell in the process. Luckily, my one cultivated verbascum has so far escaped their attentions, but a buddleja and several of the wild mulleins growing


Teeny tiny trees for small gardens

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 29/04/2008 12:14:02

are never just out of reach. Be warned however, that tiny trees do not produce a lot of fruit. Rootstock M27 will support a tree that will grow no bigger than about ten feet. For more information try the Brogdale Horticultural Trust.If you're in a very


The last dance - grasses in autumn

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

three good examples and then shut up (I'm sure you have other things to do with your time.)I grow Molinia caerulea subsp. arundinacea 'Windspiel' as a hedge - most of the year it is quiet and well behaved but about now it begins to flirt outrageously


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