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James Alexander-Sinclair (5)
Adam Pasco (4)
Pippa Greenwood (2)
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A rose by any other name...

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 04/12/2007 08:51:02

for various clients. If you have not yet ordered then get your skates on as they are best bought at this time of year for winter planting. As were all plants until relatively recently - nurserymen dug up and split plants and then sent them out wrapped in paper


It was a dark and stormy day...

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 11/12/2007 08:51:02

Scott's tree planting habits).- The Merry Hall Trilogy. I adore these books: beautifully written, light and fluffy sagas about a new garden taken on in the 1950s by novelist Beverley Nichols. He writes very amusingly about people, places, plants and cats


Growing garlic

By Jane Moore on 10/10/2008 14:50:00

! After the disastrous summer we've had I'm relishing the thought of next season; I'm organising the crop rotation and digging the ground. The garlic couldn't have arrived at a better time.My garlic bulbs arrive by post as I ordered them online from a


Seeing double

By Adam Pasco on 23/07/2007 10:58:02

Sometimes plants do the strangest things, and some of these could make you a small fortune. One of the first dahlia blooms to open in my garden has put on more of a show than expected by producing a flower head with two faces! It looks as if two


Compost and green manures

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

Who could ever produce enough compost for all their needs? I remember watching the late Geoff Hamilton at Barnsdale week after week on Gardeners' World, using countless buckets of beautiful home-made compost. Every planting hole was filled


A poke in the eye

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 30/10/2007 09:01:02

One of the best looking plants in my garden this week is the Pokeweed or Phytolacca americana. It is always interesting when plants that are noxious weeds in some parts of the world are regarded as something interesting and unusual in others


Bargains galore

By Pippa Greenwood on 15/11/2007 10:08:35

plants that'll go in to several containers...and then could end up as full-sized gorgeous plants in my garden...all for just over £1.00 each. Crazily good value; I just hope whoever propagated them got a decent cut. But how could they have at that price


Daffodils in May

By Pippa Greenwood on 22/05/2008 11:00:00

This week at the Chelsea Flower Show there are thousands of gardeners admiring out of season daffodil blooms in the show gardens and floral exhibits.In order to get their daffodils blooming at this time of year, growers force the bulbs to grow using


Begonias

By Adam Pasco on 25/03/2008 14:10:00

's not go there.The brown tubers look so unpromising when they arrive in the post from mail-order suppliers, but planted with the slightly concave surface upwards you'll soon spot signs of growth as green shoots emerge. Trailing varieties are available


Late-summer flowers

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 09/09/2008 13:56:00

for another list...My favourite late-flowering perennial plants, in no particular order:Rudbeckia fulgida var. sullivantii 'Goldsturm' - about 75cm high. Flowers until at least mid-October.Agastache 'Blue Fortune' - not one one for very cold parts


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