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Plants (3)
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James Alexander-Sinclair (5)

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More than 12 months (5)

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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


Bugs and daylilies

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 01/07/2008 12:07:00

'd venture, briefly and very amateurishly, into Pippa's territory to see what pests are doing their best to blight my garden. I'm not brilliant at such things, and quake inside when people bear down on me, clutching festering leaves in polythene bags. A very


Build me up buttercup

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 26/05/2009 15:49:02

they are no longer a pest but something extremely beautiful - a classic example of a weed simply being a plant in the wrong place. There is a thick blanket of the creeping variety, through which the occasional cranesbill forces its head later in the season. Not much


The strange case of the wilting wisteria

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 30/06/2009 16:04:34

, which I do my best to answer when I can - bearing in mind that I am mostly a poncey designer rather than being a Pippa Greenwood-style pest queen.Anyway, in that geum post a chap called Bruce asked about his wisteria that had "gone limp and lifeless


Carnivorous plants

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 27/09/2010 16:47:53

plants (there was a particularly striking group of them in Tom Hoblyn's Chelsea garden in 2009). These have slippery sides into which insects fall and are then digested by the fluid at the base of the pitcher. There are large colonies growing in both


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