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Birds: thrushes and fieldfares

By Richard Jones on 20/01/2010 16:31:48

Snow is not the best weather for finding insects, so I was not surprised, last week, when my brief wander up the garden found nothing. It didn’t help that I was under sustained attack from snowballing children at the time. But as my fellow bloggers


Culinary herbs pot display

By Gardeners' World on 22/07/2011 15:48:17

Home-grown herbs will bring your cooking to life, so why not make life really easy by planting them in a window box? Position it on your kitchen windowsill, then all you have to do is lean out to snip fresh pickings of fresh, home-grown herbs


Pelargoniums

By Pippa Greenwood on 22/09/2010 08:14:55

Autumn is the ideal time to evaluate our successes and failures in the garden. What worked well this year? What didn't? On my veg plot, though, this process is pretty much continual. Photographers from Gardeners' World magazine are always turning up


How to make paper pots

By on 05/03/2013 13:07:29

Making your own pots from paper will save you money, and reduce the amount of plastic you use in your garden and greenhouse. Newspaper pots are completely biodegradable, so when plants are growing strongly and ready to go outside, the whole pot can


Newts and wildlife ponds

By Richard Jones on 26/03/2013 15:22:04

she hadn't dashed off into the depths. Today, though, when I nip out into the cold wilderness of my garden to have a little look around, I find there is a thin layer of ice on the pond.The rational part of me suspects that even though our pond is very


Mulching with compost

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

and the weeds will grow through regardless!So, if I'm ever asked for a gardening tip for a new gardener it would have to be mulch, mulch, mulch. Home-made compost costs you nothing, so make as much as you can from kitchen and garden waste as well as leaves


Pruning herbs

By Jekka McVicar on 07/03/2008 16:26:00

with snow. My advice would be to hold off until mid-March.I've just finished pruning the myrtles. Myrtle is a wonderful herb, not only for the beauty of the flowers, but also for the amazing aromas and flavours it creates in the kitchen. You can't go wrong


Raspberry beetle

By Pippa Greenwood on 31/07/2009 10:31:51

to spot in the fruit, if you leave the container of picked berries in your kitchen for an hour, you’re likely to see the culprits appear around the edges of the bowl.Sadly, the recent wet weather seems to have exacerbated the problem, because affected


The world's favourite rose

By Adam Pasco on 03/08/2009 15:20:21

grow it in a border close to the house, where I can admire it in full bloom from my kitchen window. It has rich yellow cup-shaped blooms that fade to pale yellow, a colour rarely found in old roses. The upright habit of 'Graham Thomas' means it stands


Squirrels, foxes and snow

By Richard Jones on 08/12/2010 15:11:42

through the fresh blanket sniffing for whatever it is in our garden that foxes sniff for. The squirrel did not see the fox, snow in its eye perhaps, but the fox saw his quarry immediately. He lowered his profile and spread his weight, tensing his back


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