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Plant hunters

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 25/11/2008 14:44:31

Garden Media Guild Awards) but above all he is an enthusiast.He follows in the footsteps of not only recent figures (the late Geoff Hamilton springs to mind) but of many of the great plant hunters. Have you ever grown Viburnum farreri? You should


Lifting and dividing

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 11/03/2009 08:57:53

girding of loins and a flourishing of hoes.Casting an eye over my borders recently, I noticed that some of my plants were badly in need of splitting. In particular need of attention was a fine grass called Calamagrostis x acutiflora 'Karl Foerster', which


My first garden

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 21/10/2008 14:25:07

Do you remember the first plant you ever grew in your own garden? Not the mustard and cress or sunflower that you nurtured in a little patch of your parents' gardens but the first plant that you grew just for yourself?I found some ancient


Gardening with children

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 22/11/2010 13:17:57

and dusty radish.However, I think it is generally an excellent thing to try and get children to grow stuff - if only so that they understand how plants behave. Schools are now much more proactive in encouraging gardening clubs and planting up areas around


First frost of the winter

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 03/12/2012 14:57:58

be dark and droopy and rapidly on its way to becoming complete mush. There is no chance of any more flowers until next summer. So cut down your plants and dig up the conglomeration of dangling tubers you will find underground. Clean off as much of the wet


Good things about February

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

. Sarcococca hookeriana: I drove to Devon last week with nine of these in the back of my car. The scent was amazing and, even though the plants are now happily planted in a client’s garden, the smell is still there. Plant them close to pathways6. Chitting


To chop or not to chop?

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 28/10/2008 12:26:17

Do you have an autumn clear-up in your garden? Do you cut down all your herbaceous stuff so that everything is tidy for the winter or do you leave everything until the new year? Most people nowadays leave it until later to give food for small birds


Browsing botanic gardens

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 07/04/2009 16:43:58

and homeliness of a 'proper' garden, but that's the point, really. It's wonderful to see a fabulous tree or shrub and know that somewhere very close will be a neatly engraved label giving more information than you will ever need. Not just the plant name but also


Manure

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 17/02/2009 16:55:23

I have just ordered a whopping great pile of manure. A couple of weeks ago we finished cutting everything back and hunting down any perennial weeds that were hiding beneath the plants in readiness for mulching: had it not snowed we would have


Garden photography

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 07/11/2011 14:23:20

Over the years, I've taken a lot of photographs. There are photographs of various gardens - my own, other people’s, show gardens, gardens I have visited and front gardens I have passed in the street. And then there are other subjects, including plants


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