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Hedges heaven

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 14/08/2007 09:38:02

We have just clipped the yew hedge: actually, to be completely accurate, a very nice fellow called Simon clipped it as I was too busy being a poncey garden designer (a pity as I really enjoy hedge clipping but time has been a bit short recently


Gardening disputes between neighbours

By Kate Bradbury on 10/09/2010 13:47:13

If you're bearing a grudge against your neighbours, one way to exact revenge is plant a leylandii hedge in your garden. Left unclipped, it could grow to up to 35m high and 5m wide. It will be a haven for garden birds, insects and even the odd mammal


A gardeners' visit to Madeira

By Pippa Greenwood on 04/05/2011 17:12:42

very favourite garden destinations. I love seeing what we would regard as house plants growing with weed-like vigour on the roadside, or trimmed to form a hedge. Poinsettia always looks wonderful there, not to mention the tangled jungles of Opuntia


Evergreen trees: the holm oak

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 09/12/2008 16:25:59

planting 'aliens', they stick out like sore thumbs.  By aliens I mean the good serviceable evergreens that work well in gardens but never quite fit in when planted near fields and woods. A tall conifer in a hedge looks as uncomfortable as a jockey in a


Gardening theft

By Kate Bradbury on 04/02/2011 11:58:15

, garden gnomes, stone ornaments, expensive bonsais and even whole ponds, hedges and fences are just some of the items regularly reported as stolen. A friend of mine had one of two box cones stolen from outside her front door. Apart from ruining


It's sloe gin time

By Pippa Greenwood on 01/11/2007 09:46:35

to start early because although there is now a tremendous crop on some of the Prunus spinosa that we planted shortly after we moved here (the excuse was that it is of course, a great native hedging plant!).Those by the footpath will be cleared of all fruit


Starlings

By Adam Pasco on 10/11/2008 16:33:56

enjoy in our gardens if fences were replaced by hedges. I think I feel a new campaign coming on ... anyone fancy joining me?


Carol Klein: Life in a Cottage Garden

By Adam Pasco on 10/01/2011 16:47:04

With such a dull, damp and dismal start to the year, I didn't feel very motivated to venture into my garden. That all changed last Friday as I watched Carol Klein's new series, Life in a Cottage Garden, documenting her gardening year at Glebe


Preparing gardens for spring

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 17/01/2011 16:59:29

-forgiving whiteness has gone and left behind it … well, a lot of soggy, mucky chaos. Hedges are staggering slightly after supporting all that weight and my flower borders look about as attractive as roadside ditches. I tend to leave my herbaceous plants standing


Wilding the Chelsea Flower Show

By Kate Bradbury on 23/05/2011 15:20:50

. There was also a gorgeous sculpture of two boxing hares.Even more traditional ornamental gardens featured relaxed, wildlife-friendly planting. Cleve West's Daily Telegraph Garden was made using reclaimed Cotswold stone and yew hedging, along with nectar


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