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Planting tulips late

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 14/01/2013 14:40:59

to have done by now. A box of tulips is sitting under my desk (along with two pairs of shoes, the overspill from the waste paper basket and a pen top whose presence I have been missing for a while). They should have been planted at least a month ago (the


Your tulips were made for kissin'...

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 13/11/2007 08:53:02

November is the month to plant tulips. There are few things more wonderful in this world than to cradle a tulip bulb in your hand; the rustling wispy-crispy skin and the smooth, slightly clammy flesh. Supremely organised and efficient gardeners


Spring flowers - my least favourites

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 25/03/2008 13:26:00

of colour and life; in the majority of cases this is to be welcomed. Hooray for the resurgence of tulips, whoopee for the return of the rose and yippee for the arrival of annuals.However, there are some plants which I am not looking forward to seeing again


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


Look at your bulbs

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 28/04/2009 16:59:00

there are not enough, because I bet you a shiny 20p piece that in a couple of weeks, when they have died back and other things have doubled in size, that you will have completely forgotten.I plant a lot of bulbs every year for various clients — last autumn I had about


Bluebells, tulips and the Malvern Show

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 06/05/2008 12:14:02

.Looking at my garden this morning, however, I realised that we're a bit short of colour at this time of year. I know that within a few weeks the place will be alive with flower but right now it's a little flat.I didn't plant enough tulips last year. Right now


Five plants for Christmas gifts

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 06/12/2010 11:39:54

stop to our normal November gardening routine. I would usually be spending jolly weekends doing a bit of light tidying, collecting the last of the autumn leaves and planting the last of the tulip bulbs. Instead we have been shoveling snow out


Six plants for a new garden

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 19/08/2008 12:33:00

is so unexpected and so swift that you're only able to take six plants from your existing garden.So which six plants will you choose? Will you go for something big - a favourite cherry or a noble oak? Maybe an evergreen to liven up your winter? A rose


It was a dark and stormy day...

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 11/12/2007 08:51:02

into groups and classifications) and Joseph Banks (who travelled with Captain James Cook and discovered many new plants). He was also one of the founders of the Royal Horticultural Society and, possibly, the only committee member of that august institution


Gardening mistakes

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 01/09/2010 16:10:59

called Panicum 'Rehbraun', planted with Cosmos 'Dazzler' and the fabulous Tithonia rotundifolia (pictured, top) that are bushy and wonderful, but I completely forgot to plant anything for spring: no tulips, no alliums, no nothing. As a result I had


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