London (change)
Today 18°C / 13°C
Tomorrow 17°C / 9°C
Keywords:
Sort by:


Around the garden checklist

By Gardeners' World on 23/11/2011 12:55:13

Save time by investing in a garden vac to scoop up fallen leaves, for leaf-mouldPlant bare-root trees, bare-root shrubs and hedgingRegularly wash and disinfect bird baths and feedersAvoid walking on lawns covered with frostEmpty the contents of well


Flowers checklist

By Gardeners' World on 23/11/2011 12:55:33

Prune the tops of standard roses to reduce wind rockKeep off lawns in frosty weather or if very wetPrune wisteria, shortening sideshoots to 10-15cm from their baseCheck tree ties are secureOrder dahlias, gladioli and other summer-flowering bulbsTie in the stems


Ants

By Gardeners' World on 18/10/2011 11:13:01

from the plant's roots. On the lawn or between the cracks in paving slabs, heaps of fine soil appear.Ants are persistent and it's almost impossible to eliminate them in the garden. You can flush them out from containers by giving the compost a thorough


Weeds - dandelions

By Pippa Greenwood on 29/05/2008 13:22:00

years seems to have produced a bumper crop of them. Right now they look stunning in my grass (no, I don't call it a lawn) and the central strip of my drive. They're well loved by many insects and adored by the local rabbits (I wonder if this is a good


The coyote willow

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 07/07/2009 11:01:37

My daughter has just wandered into my office to ask "what is all that stuff growing in the lawn?". While not exactly a perfectly worded horticultural query it is a very interesting point. At the moment the grass is spattered with silver


Pyramidal orchids

By Richard Jones on 15/07/2009 11:21:27

of this will be laced with old lime mortar.This isn't the first time I've seen pyramidals hereabouts. Three years ago I found a lone spire growing from the lawn of the local church, St Clement with St Peter. The present church was built in the early 1950s. The original


Hedges and topiary

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 13/05/2008 12:38:00

topiary. In the winter they provide structure and add tone; in the summer they seem like benevolent aunts standing stiffly, but attentively, above a gambolling chaos of flower and lawn.You don't need a huge stately garden to use topiary. In my garden I


Charles Darwin and worms

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 13/01/2009 13:51:06

2009 is likely to be stuffed with articles, books and programmes about Charles Darwin. It is the year of Darwin’s 200th birthday and also the 150th anniversary of the publication of The Origin of Species, his best known work. The BBC are marking


My gardening year

By Kate Bradbury on 23/12/2010 12:16:02

's cornflower, field poppy and bird's foot trefoil will have self-seeded in my lawn, but if not, I'll be sowing seed in the lawn's margins. The lone foxglove produced plenty of offspring, but I'll have to wait until 2012 to see those flower.I'm still not pleased


Weeding garden paths

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:40:22

.Tackle weeds quicklyGrass and weeds will soon spread across a path that's been laid through a lawn, so cut the grass back to a neat edge to keep it under control. Use a stiff, sharp blade, such as a hand-weeding knife or lawn-edging tool. Use a long wooden


Search time: 0.02 secs