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What to do now in your garden - week 30

By Gardeners' World on 22/07/2011 14:59:30

garden hedgesAround the gardenTake cuttings from shrubsPrune out plain green shoots from variegated trees and shrubsCut lavender for drying when in full flowerFlowersHarvest onions sown last autumn for early cropsWater celery regularly in dry weather


'Grow Your Own' Week: Getting started

By Kate Bradbury on 01/04/2010 09:20:33

ground, in which all but two rotted. I tried everything the books told me not to grow: onions from seed, celery, cauliflower. Even aubergine – which, against all odds, produced quite a good crop (I left them on the plant too long though, hoping they


How to store apples

By Gardeners' World on 19/07/2011 11:42:22

may want to invest in an apple rack. Apple racks can store a large quantity of fruit, and enable air to circulate between the layers, so you don't need to wrap each fruit individually.More on growing and storing onionsSummer-pruning apple trees


How to sow seeds outdoors

By Gardeners' World on 20/07/2011 17:21:01

The warmth of spring and summer allows you to sow vegetable seeds outdoors in the soil. Here they'll quickly germinate to produce crops to enjoy this season. Try easy-to-grow salads such as radish, spring onion and salad bowl lettuce. You can also


Brussels sprouts

By Jane Moore on 21/12/2007 10:25:00

'Charlotte' for our lunch. (I've still got a few Charlottes left in store and although it's a second early salad variety I find it keeps really rather well). I've also got plenty of garlic and onions still in store for the obligatory turkey curry!But up


Slugs and snails and puppy dogs' tails

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 05/02/2008 11:14:00

pests out there which we, in Britain, will never have to deal with in our gardens.For example in Trinidad there is a large ant (about 1cm long) called a bachak that will (along with a few hundred friends) quickly demolish a garden. They even eat onions


Nettles

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 08/07/2008 12:14:00

most people seem to prefer Tesco to fossicking around in hedgerows). It's well known that nettle soup can be made from the tips, but less well known are Scottish nettle pudding (that includes oats, onions, sprouts, butter and gravy as well as nettle


Preparing the soil for planting

By Jane Moore on 03/10/2008 13:36:00

revived, enthusiasm has soared and the plot is looking rather good. I've done an awful lot of clearing and weeding and now I've started digging over the raised beds. Garlic, broad bean and autumn onion set planting is only weeks away, so I thought I might


Couch grass

By Jane Moore on 19/09/2008 14:36:00

good had hoeing conditions this year, have we?Now it's high time for a good weed through the plot, which will also prepare the beds for my autumn plantings of garlic and onions. I usually hand weed - it's time consuming but very satisfying - alternating


Nectaroscordum of the gods

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 05/05/2009 18:04:09

.Nectaroscordum grows from a bulb, and is part of the allium (or onion) family. In fact it used to be called Allium bulgaricum until the nomenclaturists stepped in a few years ago. While I'm always smitten by the spherical flowers of most alliums (for example the tennis


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