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Gardeners' musings (4)
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James Alexander-Sinclair (5)

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Persistent weeds

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 26/02/2008 10:54:00

perennial weeds; before the garden really gets going it is quite easy to track them down. Also the ground is soft enough to winkle out the clinging roots of buttercups or the long parsnipy tap roots of docks. The nicotine yellow roots of nettles are easy


Octoberfest

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 09/10/2007 11:38:02

post-coital.But it is by no means all over as now the late summer perennials and shrubs (Rudbeckias, Asters, Ceratostigmas, Cimicifuga, Nicotiana sylvestris etc) kick in giving a second wind to borders.October comes and even the late


Christmas list: gardening gifts

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 02/12/2008 11:55:22

It is December (already) and Christmas is lurking around the corner like a tinsel clad, benevolent bogeyman dripping with cranberry sauce and liqueur chocolates.You know that perennial question “what would you like for Christmas”? It was all so very


Manure

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 17/02/2009 16:55:23

I have just ordered a whopping great pile of manure. A couple of weeks ago we finished cutting everything back and hunting down any perennial weeds that were hiding beneath the plants in readiness for mulching: had it not snowed we would have


To spray, or not to spray?

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 28/09/2009 11:40:56

it into something else. Rather than spend a lot of time (and client's money) digging out perennial weeds and scrappy grass, I tend to spray the whole lot off instead.I have tried burning them but that doesn't really work, so until someone comes up


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