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Gardening in gales, rain, and hail

By Pippa Greenwood on 13/03/2008 10:31:00

where there is no risk of flooding, the extent of the damage to my house and garden is incredible. My current pride and joy (as it is every March) is the display of daffodils on the drive leading up to my house. The rain and wind have flattened my daffs


Slugs, rain and nematodes

By Pippa Greenwood on 05/06/2008 17:30:00

Where have all the flowers gone? Why did it have to happen now? Just as I had been lulled in to a false sense of security the heavens opened again. There's been enough rain to fill all of my water butts several times over and the ground is now a


Reasons to be cheerful (Part one)

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 24/07/2007 09:38:02

Gardeners (like opposition politicians) quite enjoy a bit of a moan. In the case of politicians then almost any excuse will do: for gardeners it is usually the weather. It's seldom perfect and in recent weeks all of us have had more rain than


Picking blackberries

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 16/09/2008 12:34:00

It's blackberry time - not those machines, without which many "suits" would feel emasculated, but fat berries swollen by rain and aching for crumble. The blackberry bramble is a weed, and the perfect example of a plant simply growing in the wrong


Flat as a pancake

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 27/11/2007 10:59:02

Last Sunday evening the rain, that had been pouring down all day, turned to snow. Had I not had to spend at least part of the evening towing stuck motorists up a steep hill in the village, it would have been very pretty to watch. It stopped falling


All the leaves are brown

By Jane Moore on 23/11/2007 11:02:00

. That was swiftly followed by a sudden warm spell bringing in steady rain. And when I say steady I mean it! The balmy Mendip Hills are, like Ireland, soft and green and lush - perfect for fattening the dairy cows whose milk makes the original Cheddar cheese produced


Potato blight

By Pippa Greenwood on 19/07/2007 12:03:35

'm growing for the Gardeners' World Magazine series) seemed to be as happy as Larry.That will teach me to be big headed, last night I found it - evil blackish brown blotches just starting up on the leaves. Luckily it has finally stopped raining so the spores


Turning over a new leaf

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 06/11/2007 08:53:02

What a glorious week it has been (with apologies to those in other places who have had torrential rain/snow/hailstones the size of gulls eggs/unseasonal drought etc).Every morning at about 7:15 we walk around the fields - with such clear skies


Final preparations for Chelsea

By Jekka McVicar on 09/05/2008 18:08:00

with the comfrey (Symphytum officinale), following closely behind. They're now all in the shade tunnel. The combination of sun, heat rain and wind is a nightmare. If we leave the herbs in full flower outside, they'll be damaged, but if we bring them in they can


It was a dark and stormy day...

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 11/12/2007 08:51:02

Today is a wet, windy, cold, miserable, dreary, murky, depressing, cheerless, uninspiring and downright dingy day. It has not stopped raining and it always seems as if darkness is about to fall. It is the sort of day when only the very dedicated


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