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Potato blight

By Pippa Greenwood on 09/07/2009 17:54:48

plants are likely to need the ultimate short back and sides soon after. By cutting the infected haulms off promptly, preferably before it rains, I can hopefully prevent the spores from the haulms washing down and infecting the tubers below. True


Algae in the garden

By Pippa Greenwood on 23/02/2011 16:53:25

. The soil is saturated in many areas and, with rain continuing to fall, the air is pretty damp, too.So, what can I do about it? Well, forking in the surface covering of algae on the soil will do the trick there. The algae on the trees I can ignore. (People


Leaf scorch

By Pippa Greenwood on 10/08/2011 17:44:57

. Wind can scorch leaves as well as sun (and we’ve certainly had plenty of wind in Hampshire). Heavy rain and hail will also damage plants, peppering leaves and flowers with tiny shot marks.To make matters worse, water droplets on foliage can magnify


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


A plumb job

By Adam Pasco on 06/08/2007 10:58:02

flavour at all. Is it just me or are plums everywhere particularly tasteless this year? Perhaps the relentless rain and lack of sun have taken their toll, swelling fruits but making them very 'watery'. Good looks aren't everything. It's flavour I want


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

; the temperatures have reached 23ºC in the day and fall to 13ºC at night. Sudden high temperatures after a long period of cold have caused many plants to grow very fast, which leads to wilting. The wonderful Angelica archangelica was the first to succumb


Fungi

By Richard Jones on 16/09/2009 11:45:25

My lawn is bone dry. I keep putting off watering it because it's autumn for goodness sake and it should rain soon. It's looking a bit brown, but I know it will recover fine with the first precipitation. The clouds, however, tenaciously hang


Bluebells

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 26/04/2011 10:53:07

Every morning before breakfast we go for a walk through the surrounding fields. We miss out on Sundays but are pretty conscientious every other day of the year. Except when it is absolutely tipping it down with rain - which, and this is a slight


Dead thrushes and the bloody nose beetle

By Richard Jones on 18/08/2010 16:43:31

it is after. Cherry stones indelicately spat there? Perhaps it is just being curious. Wagtails flit on the pool cover which, after yesterday's heavy rain, is now a pool on a pool. They must be drinking the rainwater collected there.Friday 13th The escargots


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