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Five ways to grow better roses

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:31:05

all summer long. Support them, feed and water them regularly, remove spent flowers and watch out for signs of pests and diseases. Our five tips, below, will ensure your roses put on a show-stopping display.Deadhead roses regularly, otherwise plants


Growing hellebores

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:31:37

're rarely troubled by pests and diseases and will self-seed readily all over the garden.Also popular is the Lenten rose hybrid, Helleborus x hybridus, whose flowers range in colour from immaculate white to virtually black, with nearly every shade of green


How to force anemone corms

By Gardeners' World on 19/07/2011 11:40:07

it facing upwards. Cover with compost. Position somewhere cold and dark and check regularly for watering and pests. Once leaves appear in 10-12 weeks, bring the bulbs into the house.AdamTry forcing other spring bulbs, such as Narcissus 'Hugh Town', 'Itzim


How to make a hinged nest box

By Gardeners' World on 19/07/2011 11:52:32

'll reward you through their tireless efforts to hunt and eat your garden pests during spring and summer.Once you've created your nest box, why not follow our advice on installing a nest box camera, which will give you a fascinating insight into the lives


Beetles, wasps and toads

By Richard Jones on 04/06/2008 11:12:00

and widespread, but more an insect of rough flowery grassland, verges, meadows and commons than of domestic gardens. The larvae burrow in plant stems, but only wild flowers so it's never a pest. It's easy to see how this noble-looking beetle got its scientific


Snails in the garden

By Richard Jones on 09/07/2008 13:14:00

of stairs. Instead of a tight whorl forming the usual globe shape, the helix is stretched out into a point.I'm guessing that no matter how much I go on about snails, most people will regard them as a nuisance and a pest. But maybe this is because we haven


Ghosts of christmas past

By Richard Jones on 24/12/2008 16:39:49

in case I was dangerous, or sizing me up as potential prey.They have slightly more interesting garden 'pests' in Florida. This paper wasp nest was tucked out of the way against the eves, and anyway it was very small.And one day I turned over a few small


Reflections on Gardeners' World Live 2009

By Adam Pasco on 15/06/2009 16:46:50

and (hopefully) entertaining shows with great gardeners like Pippa Greenwood, Anne Swithinbank, Alys Fowler and Kevin Smith on far ranging topics like orchids, pest control, thrifty tips and wildlife gardening.What a mix. In one show we could be describing


Ladybird pupae

By Pippa Greenwood on 23/07/2009 15:03:35

, but the larvae, with their larger than expected size and strange almost caterpillar-like scuttling habit, are more likely to be incorrectly identified. All too often people tell me they have squashed them, believing them to be garden pests, when in fact


Western conifer seed-bug

By Richard Jones on 25/11/2009 09:12:09

-eastern USA, arriving in New York in 1990 and Pennsylvania in 1992.In the USA and Canada it is regarded as a forestry pest because of its damage to conifer seeds and developing cones, especially Douglas fir. Seed destruction rates of 80% have been recorded


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