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Carol Klein: Life in a Cottage Garden

By Adam Pasco on 10/01/2011 16:47:04

With such a dull, damp and dismal start to the year, I didn't feel very motivated to venture into my garden. That all changed last Friday as I watched Carol Klein's new series, Life in a Cottage Garden, documenting her gardening year at Glebe


Guerrilla gardening and planting tulips

By Kate Bradbury on 14/10/2011 14:50:04

removing the wild plants, perhaps the gardeners could have planted the tulips among them. Rather than tulips, spring bulbs such as crocus, snake's head fritillary and snowdrops, could have been planted to provide a much-needed early source of nectar


Signs of spring

By Pippa Greenwood on 26/01/2011 12:28:26

I recently undertook a spot of tidying in one of my flowerbeds. Generally I avoid clearing up too early in winter, and I don’t remove too much old growth, as retaining it can limit plant damage during late-winter cold snaps.Usually, after spending


Good things about February

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 12/02/2013 15:37:32

available.2. Snowdrops: The first sign of life. Best not planted as bulbs, though. They should be planted in about March ‘in the green’. This means that they are dug up after flowering and planted then.3. Iris reticulata: really, really special. A gorgeous


A snow-covered garden

By Adam Pasco on 09/02/2009 15:45:38

degrees of frosty weather in between. I like to think a deep carpet of snow, although clearly at zero degrees or less, is actually insulating plants below from even colder air temperatures above. Hopefully no harm will come to the perennials and bulbs


Wind and rain damage in the garden

By Pippa Greenwood on 28/11/2012 10:37:28

to deep mud. They’re in a worse state than they get into in the depths of a wet winter, and it’s only the end of November. I’ve had to plant the last of my spring-flowering bulbs in containers, as I can’t plant them into the saturated soil. In an attempt


Daffodils

By Pippa Greenwood on 10/01/2008 10:12:00

its way through the frozen ground and came in to bloom, all on its own. I have planted hundreds of daffodil bulbs in the same spot, but no others have shown even the slightest hint of appearing quite so early. It has been out, looking delicately


Are garden centres dull?

By Adam Pasco on 06/09/2010 11:10:56

What do you look for in a good garden centre? I would imagine most people would expect garden centres to offer a great range of plants along with a heavy dose of inspiration and expert advice.However, many garden centres have been transformed


RHS Wisley

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 15/03/2010 15:10:43

jolly day with some great plants (all of them clearly labelled), then you can't go wrong with Wisley.I was there a week or so ago to watch things grow: the whole garden thrums with the promise of approaching spring. There are, of course, the obvious


Preparing gardens for spring

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 17/01/2011 16:59:29

-forgiving whiteness has gone and left behind it … well, a lot of soggy, mucky chaos. Hedges are staggering slightly after supporting all that weight and my flower borders look about as attractive as roadside ditches. I tend to leave my herbaceous plants standing


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