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9 results returned

Mulching with compost

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

I love mulching, and my soil loves it too. Not that I'd admit this in public, but I think it's partly the lazy gardener in me that chooses mulching over digging - it's a far easier way to incorporate bulky organic material into soil.Yes, there's a


Dealing with a waterlogged garden

By Adam Pasco on 26/11/2012 16:26:00

to dig, spread a thick layer of compost, manure or composted green waste (like peat-free compost) over the soil surface. Worms will gradually work this in and the surface layer acts as a mulch to deter the germination of annual weeds.On the veg plot, I


Protecting plants from cold weather

By Adam Pasco on 29/10/2012 16:43:00

The sudden drop in temperature has got me flustered. I know it shouldn’t, as every year by Halloween the weather has usually turned significantly colder.Well, the clocks have gone back, evenings have got darker, and the chilly weather confirms the end of the 2012 growing season. ...


Great value dahlias

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

thing is just how you can ignore them and they'll still flourish. Despite my heavy clay soil I've just left them in the ground, and they've grown up again every summer. If I was more conscientious I would have spread a mulch of compost over the area


Compost and green manures

By Adam Pasco on 31/03/2008 10:23:00

with the stuff, every shrub and fruit bush mulched with a thick layer, and still the overflowing buckets continued to come!I'm a keen home composter - who isn't these days - but I do still resort to buying in mushroom compost from time to time. If I lived near a


Dividing perennials

By Adam Pasco on 03/05/2011 11:01:55

, with new shoots spreading outwards from the fringes. The soil they're growing in gets more impoverished as its nutrients become exhausted.So, what can be done? I do spread a good mulch of compost over the soil around them each year, and this is gradually


Leaf fall

By Adam Pasco on 26/11/2007 10:12:02

of the way. Within a year the contents will have rotted down into lovely leaf mould, which I usually use as a mulch. I wonder if there are different recipes for making the perfect leaf mould?What about leaves elsewhere in the garden? I'm now a fan


Growing summer bulbs

By Adam Pasco on 07/02/2011 11:57:10

being far hardier.Another trick when growing them in the garden is to plant deeply – perhaps 20cm or more down – so that they’ll get through winter without being frozen. You can often do the same with dahlias and gladioli, perhaps with just a mulch over


Growing rhubarb

By Adam Pasco on 18/04/2011 11:43:57

into the soil before planting. I crammed three plants into the end of one of my deep beds, where it can be left undisturbed to flourish. A deep compost mulch and regular watering during last summer's drought got it well established. However, this spring two


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