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Dealing with a waterlogged garden

By Adam Pasco on 26/11/2012 16:26:00

by flooding. It’s hard to imagine anything worse happening to your home.Putting up with a wet garden could appear rather trivial in the context of major weather events, but the past few years have highlighted how variable and extreme our weather has become


Moles and molehills

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 25/08/2009 16:31:35

I don't believe it. I am incandescent with spluttering indignation. For the first time ever a molehill has appeared on my lawn.We've lived here for about 15 years. Before that the garden was a concrete farmyard, so this particular mole


Artificial grass

By Kate Bradbury on 13/08/2010 10:43:21

garden without life? There are already too many public spaces filled with hanging baskets 'planted' with fake flowers. I stand at train stations and lament the sight of bees and hoverflies wasting energy working out that their search for food is in vain


Winter Wonderland

By Adam Pasco on 27/12/2010 08:09:54

in the sun. Everything was wrapped in a frozen overcoat. Will the plants survive? Most will, but like every adventurous gardener I push the boundaries of my gardening and grow a range of plants you would describe as having 'borderline hardiness'. Only time


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


Bank holiday gardening jobs

By Kate Bradbury on 21/04/2011 15:01:55

.I'd decided to leave all the seedlings emerging in the borders to see what they'd turn into. Trees, mostly. So I'll be removing them, along with some plants I'm donating to some friends, and adding nicer ones I recently dug up and divided from my mum's garden


Cake day

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 11/07/2007 09:38:02

titivating things: more specifically I've been plugging any gaps in the planting to compensate for the ravages of the army of cute (but intensely irritating) baby rabbits that use the garden as their own personal theme park. There are very few ways


Garden bonfires: ashes to ashes

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 18/11/2008 11:12:37

' worth of detritus sitting in an open shed. Now, some of you may have seen pictures of my garden before and will have realised that there are lots of plants crammed in here. As a result there is a small mountain of stuff that I need to shred.This brings


Charles Darwin and worms

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 13/01/2009 13:51:06

of Worms outlined the contribution made by worms to the decomposition of vegetable matter (fallen leaves, dead plant material etc) and thus to the fertility of the soil.Darwin kept worms in tanks in his study and spent many hours observing their behavior


Gardeners' World Live 2009

By Adam Pasco on 08/06/2009 13:18:16

this show. Then there are inspiring show gardens, plant societies, an orchid feature ... and kids go free at the weekend.The Good Food Summer Festival runs alongside Gardeners' World Live this year, and tickets get visitors in to both events, so great value


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