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In the bleak midwater

By Richard Jones on 06/08/2008 13:35:00

quantities per m³ of estimated water volume. Since the park was revamped a year or so ago it is a delightful place to wander, but the pond was always the low point. There are now recently installed baskets of water plants (more needed I think), and wire


Potato blight

By Pippa Greenwood on 31/07/2008 12:14:00

is triggered by warm, wet weather, and if the spores are present in the air or the ground you can pretty much guarantee problems. So it's with a good deal of trepidation that I look at the rather unhappy looking foliage on my maincrop potato plants. We


Harvesting potatoes

By Jane Moore on 01/08/2008 12:36:00

It's all go at the moment, there's so much to do. The recent hot weather has had quite an impact on the plot - plants have doubled in size, flowers are abundant, the onions are trying to bolt and I've got a spring in my step.When there's so much


Slugs

By Jane Moore on 05/09/2008 13:36:00

are struggling to keep their heads above water. Usually I find a spring dose of nematodes sorts out the worst of the problem and keeps the little blighters at bay while my plants get established. But this year it's not just the little blighters that are wreaking


Japanese anemones

By Adam Pasco on 06/10/2008 15:18:00

of the house. The wall faced north, so they didn't receive any direct sun at all.Survivors are valuable garden plants, and always worth recommending to others, so when I come across sites with similar challenges, then Anemone japonica (which we now need to call


Acers in pots

By Adam Pasco on 03/11/2008 11:21:36

 and John Innes No.3 loam-based compost. All this weight provides extra stability to prevent the trees catching the wind and toppling over. These acers are no more demanding than any plants in pots, and just need regular watering and feeding.The foliage


Muntjac deer

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 30/12/2008 08:49:00

pretty widespread, especially around the midlands.Muntjac are not friends of the gardener and are quite capable of doing a fair bit of damage, not only to the soft shoots of emerging plants but can also strip bark from trees. You can deter them from


Weed of the year 2008

By Adam Pasco on 29/12/2008 09:16:42

about balance, and as long as it looks green who cares what plants make up your lawn (well, I could do without the moss!).Then there are the brambles. Now those I hate, but they keep invading from neighbouring gardens. Long stems twine their way through


Scented bulbs

By Adam Pasco on 02/02/2009 13:44:38

Breathe deeply as you enter my sitting room this month and you’ll take in the powerful, almost intoxicating fragrance of paper-white narcissi.I planted the Narcissus papyraceus bulbs last autumn, in a glass bowl layered with gravel. All I've done


Introducing Parrotia persica

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 03/02/2009 13:37:22

flash of scarlet to liven up a dank afternoon.PS The flowers in the photograph above adorn a vast multi-stemmed specimen that I've just (with the aid of much heavy machinery and many sturdy fellows) planted in a client's garden.


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