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How to repair a lawn patch

By Gardeners' World on 20/07/2011 11:48:05

best all year round.Grass seed or turfRakeSpadespring or autumn30 minutesJune - AugustSow the patch with an appropriate seed mix, sprinkling half the grass seeds in one direction and the rest in the other. Lightly rake over the seed and protect


Cuckoo spit

By Gardeners' World on 18/10/2011 14:42:19

Protected from predators and the risk of dehydration inside its moist ball of bubbles, the juvenile yellow-green froghopper (or spittle bug) is busy sucking plant sap. It's quite harmless unless it's attacking the shoot tips, which can result


Pear wasp damage

By Gardeners' World on 18/10/2011 15:47:19

cavities, often with wasps still inside feeding on the soft flesh, making the pears unappetising to eat. Prize pears can be protected by covering them in old nylon tights, squares of horticultural fleece, muslin or something similar. You can also hang up


Wasps

By Gardeners' World on 19/10/2011 12:36:37

the wasps can enter.Small holes in soft fruit or tree fruit, often with a wasp inside.Individual prize fruits can be protected by covering them in old tights, horticultural fleece, muslin or something similar. Hang up wasp traps filled with jam.Wasp nests


Mould on lilies

By Gardeners' World on 19/10/2011 13:45:26

the fungus. Lily bulbs don't have a natural protective layer and are bruised easily, which can lead to rot.Patches of mould start to appear on the bulb. Sometimes it's tucked in between the scales, or it can be found under the papery tissue around the neck


Tomato blight

By Gardeners' World on 19/10/2011 14:15:32

to other plants. Carry out repeated, preventative spraying the moment the first batch of tomatoes starts to set. Use fungicide containing copper. They don't provide 100 per cent protection, but an attack will be slowed down and you should get ripe tomatoes


Tomato - cold weather damage

By Gardeners' World on 19/11/2011 21:58:15

Sun-loving tomatoes can suffer outdoors during spells of cold weather, with ideal temperatures from 18-24˚C and no lower than 13˚C. If it is too cold there might be poor pollination, curling of leaves and the fruits might be scarred, with holes


Fruit and veg job checklist - week 1

By Gardeners' World on 23/11/2011 12:52:16

Keep harvesting root vegetables as they mature, including parsnips and leeksOrder seed potatoes, onion sets and shallotsStretch netting over brassicas to protect them from pigeonsCover clumps of rhubarb with buckets or terracotta pots to force early


Fruit and veg job checklist - week 24

By Gardeners' World on 23/11/2011 12:53:25

Finish planting out vegetable crops, including tomatoes, beans, courgettes and sweetcornSow summer salads in guttering to grow quick cropsUse netting to protect developing and ripening fruits from birdsTie in new shoots on blackberries, raspberries


Fruit and veg job checklist - week 25

By Gardeners' World on 23/11/2011 12:53:30

Plant out leeks and brassicas raised in a seed bedSpread mulch around beans and other crops to help conserve soil moistureNet developing soft fruits to protect them from birdsSpray apple trees showing signs of powdery mildew or scabWater onions


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