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Pumpkins for Halloween

By Kate Bradbury on 23/10/2009 15:13:22

I've just bought a new compost bin. This is all the more exciting because next year I'll use it to grow pumpkins. I plan to raise the bin on bricks and plant pumpkin plants in the exposed compost. The well-rotted matter will provide the plants


Gardening disputes between neighbours

By Kate Bradbury on 10/09/2010 13:47:13

If you're bearing a grudge against your neighbours, one way to exact revenge is plant a leylandii hedge in your garden. Left unclipped, it could grow to up to 35m high and 5m wide. It will be a haven for garden birds, insects and even the odd mammal


A dry spring

By Kate Bradbury on 06/05/2011 13:07:46

barely seen any rain at all.In drier parts of the UK, plants are bursting into flower earlier, bees and butterflies are out earlier, and the ground, which should be warm and wet from April showers, is parched. All this and some areas are still getting


Gardening for bats

By Kate Bradbury on 22/07/2011 16:56:22

It's easy to consider bees and birds when gardening – we see plenty of them if we grow the right plants – but what about bats? Emerging from their roosts at dusk and returning by dawn, they can often go unnoticed.My partner is a huge fan of bats


Eating weeds

By Kate Bradbury on 18/03/2011 15:45:55

A 'weed' is just a plant growing in the 'wrong place', and in my garden, most weeds are more than welcome. There are some exceptions, of course - Japanese knotweed and Himalayan balsam to name two - but the more green leafy weeds in my plot


Moths in the garden

By Kate Bradbury on 12/02/2013 17:31:47

feeding on plants at night, and finding their caterpillars amongst the foliage. Just four years ago my garden was paved over, so finding moths here feels like real progress.Sadly, few gardeners welcome moths as warmly as they do butterflies


Growing tomatoes: dos and don'ts

By Kate Bradbury on 11/03/2010 16:05:08

My experience of growing tomatoes has been relatively trouble-free. My outdoor plants often get blight towards the end of the season, but even then it doesn't seem to affect the crop too much. Once my plants refused to grow after I transplanted them


Chelsea 2010: my verdict

By Kate Bradbury on 25/05/2010 13:26:36

If only our gardens could really look like those at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show. Plunge pools and outdoor kitchen areas aside, I don't think I have a hope of achieving the 'Chelsea look'. My garden is far too scruffy, most of my plants have been


Vine weevils again

By Kate Bradbury on 30/09/2010 16:12:19

kept finding adult weevils in my flat and I had nightmares about their grubs munching through the roots of my beloved plants.I used some nematodes to kill the grubs, then spent a couple of weekends frantically inspecting pots for signs of grubs and eggs


Growing fruit for birds

By Kate Bradbury on 23/11/2012 12:24:34

This autumn I intend to add to my collection of fruiting shrubs for birds. I’m going to take advantage of the fact that plants are available more cheaply now we’ve hit bare-root planting season.Unlike pot-grown specimens, bare-root plants are dug


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