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Plants (12)

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James Alexander-Sinclair (12)

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The mock orange

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 07/06/2010 16:06:30

evening and when I got out of the car the first thing I noticed was scent. A wild romantic perfume floating through the heavy warm air. Although the planting in my garden is predominantly herbaceous, I will always have room for the begetter


A nice chrysanthemum

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 11/11/2008 11:57:08

. In Central Park, the Conservatory Garden seemed a very popular venue for wedding photography. There were at least three wedding parties when we were there; one guest, I noticed, broke away and ate two large hot dogs in quick succession before rejoining his


Growing Russian vine

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

. In short, beware: plant it only when you have enough elbow room for it to do its stuff but, if you do have a large and distant eyesore to conceal, then you cannot do much better.


Growing gunnera

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

-looking brownish spikes that shoot up in summer. You couldn’t fit it into a small garden pond, but it provides enormous impact in a large pond or boggy area of the garden.Unfortunately this Gunnera species is a little susceptible to frost, so it is best to protect


Frightful forsythia

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 31/03/2009 16:23:16

memory.There is however one big fat buzzing fly in the ointment. A plant that I have come to dislike with an almost irrational fervour. A plant that glares forth from innumerable gardens throughout the land. A plant whose impact is the equivalent of being


The strange case of the wilting wisteria

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 30/06/2009 16:04:34

Some of you might remember that I wrote about geums a few weeks ago. Sometimes those of you out there are kind enough to respond to my ramblings with comments of your own. They are mostly charming and occasionally include various garden questions


Pollen

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 25/03/2009 09:52:10

the garden. Eager to ensure that there were no smoldering buildings, or even a child enjoying a crafty cigar, I went to investigate. It was pollen, great billowing clouds of the stuff blowing off a large yew. This tree was also taking advantage of the last


Magnolias

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 26/04/2010 14:46:39

grey leaves and slightly curved lemony white flowers. Only for the very warmest and most sheltered gardens. Does well on limey soils.M. grandiflora - a later flowering variety with magnificent glossy green leaves and creamy flowers. Excellent on a large


Five plants for Christmas gifts

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 06/12/2010 11:39:54

stop to our normal November gardening routine. I would usually be spending jolly weekends doing a bit of light tidying, collecting the last of the autumn leaves and planting the last of the tulip bulbs. Instead we have been shoveling snow out


Carnivorous plants

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 27/09/2010 16:47:53

plants (there was a particularly striking group of them in Tom Hoblyn's Chelsea garden in 2009). These have slippery sides into which insects fall and are then digested by the fluid at the base of the pitcher. There are large colonies growing in both


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