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Gardeners' musings (11)

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Adam Pasco (3)
Kate Bradbury (3)
Pippa Greenwood (3)
James Alexander-Sinclair (2)

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More than 12 months (11)

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Geoffrey Smith

By Pippa Greenwood on 05/03/2009 08:09:32

I suppose I am very, very lucky to have known Geoffrey Smith and worked with him, but right now I just feel sad. Somthing is now missing for me, and indeed I know for many millions of us. Gardening has lost its Head Gardener.Geoffrey was better than


Gardening to reduce your carbon footprint

By Kate Bradbury on 29/01/2010 17:20:48

and food miles. Reducing, reusing and recycling gardening sundries and using sites like Freecycle result in less waste going to landfill. And then there's the peat issue. Peat bogs lock in CO2, preventing it from escaping into the earth's atmosphere, so


Hibernating snails

By Pippa Greenwood on 29/11/2007 10:12:02

to be tricked into forgetting them, oh no! For it is from now that any gardener who would prefer to reduce (dramatically) the damage done by these horrible little critters, grabs a bucket and goes off on a collecting spree. Snails love to group together


Choosing plants for autumn colour

By Pippa Greenwood on 21/09/2011 10:40:02

It hasn’t been a vintage year in my garden. The growing season started off well with the warm spring – good for garlic and onions - but the weather deteriorated soon after that. So, I’m actually quite relieved now that autumn is here. I can forget


Foraging

By Kate Bradbury on 15/07/2010 12:05:50

the ground. (I love dandelion leaves. There're so crunchy and refreshing after a winter of meagre salads. The trick is to pick them before they flower, after which they can taste bitter.) Then the nettles and wild garlic appear (which together make a


Collecting and saving seeds

By Adam Pasco on 19/09/2011 18:08:29

will not grow 'true’. You can still try, but there's no guarantee of the quality of the crop. There's more information on saving seed in Sue Stickland's article in the September 2011 issue of Gardeners' World Magazine.So which seeds are you saving?


Garden sheds - pesticides of the past

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 08/04/2008 11:18:00

for garden use in the 1970s. Liquid nicotine is extremely dangerous to all living creatures and was used widely as an insecticide for many, many years. It was either mixed with water as a spray or else vaporised in lamps - in which case the gardener lit


Snails and song thrushes in the garden

By Adam Pasco on 08/03/2010 14:58:51

When a letter starts "I must strongly protest at an article written by Adam Pasco…" then I do wonder what I've done wrong.Let me set the scene. You can't find much more of a bird lover than me. Just take a look at my garden, and the way I garden


Gardening injuries

By Kate Bradbury on 30/07/2010 17:57:23

eating pies. But your garden can harm you at any time of year - just the other day my friend came round to dinner sporting a black eye, which she'd received from a thorny bramble while picking blackberries. Another friend once caused herself so much


Growing veg in small spaces

By Adam Pasco on 21/02/2011 15:50:03

) – and produced a value for every crop. The main factors she considered were:1.  The length of time a crop is in the ground before being harvested.2.  The number of helpings you'd pick per square metre.Crops that grew quickly and produced high yields received a


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