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Plants for small gardens

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:35:06

Alexander-Sinclair share their top 10 plants for small gardens, which offer year-round interest and colour.The round-headed leek bears round flower-heads that open green and turn a deep red with maturity. It prefers full sun and well-drained soil


Your tulips were made for kissin'...

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 13/11/2007 08:53:02

. 'Ballerina' - soaring orange T. 'Negrita' - beetroot coloured T. 'Queen of the Night' - dark and truly gorgeous T. 'Anthraceit' - flowers like the backsides of turkeys (but prettier) T. tarda - early and peppery scentedI could go on for ever but it would


Quiet beginnings

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 28/12/2007 15:14:04

and it is one of my great pleasures. The dark green leaves go perfectly with the aged brick, in the spring it is covered with frothy white flowers and come the autumn the branches are laden with red berries. When the hard frosts come we then have a wonderful


New year welcome

By Adam Pasco on 02/01/2008 10:39:00

interested, which is surprising when food is in such short supply. I know the seeds are poisonous to humans, so birds must know this instinctively, and I'm told rabbits stay clear of them as well.Following flowers in early summer, the faded blooms give way


Swifts, newts and decking

By Richard Jones on 07/05/2008 12:12:00

On Sunday 4th of May, the winds of change swept through East Dulwich. And being an old country hand I could tell the moment I stepped out of the door that something was afoot. It wasn't a tang of salt air from the distant ocean, or a warning red sky


Liquidambar: plant this tree

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 04/11/2008 09:15:14

to pruning. Some of you might remember the Fortnum and Mason garden designed by Robert Myers at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2007. The building at the back of the garden was covered with trained liquidambars and very effective it was.There are many reasons you


Gardening and cigarette cards

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 03/03/2009 08:09:20

on such small bits of card!Another is a series of fifty garden flowers ranging from delphiniums and water lilies to annuals like bright red salvias and candytuft. Each card has a bit of information and some hints about cultivation written by Richard Sudell - who


Small trees as hedging plants

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 10/05/2010 16:36:01

, entwined together: a hawthorn (Crataegus monogyna) and a blackthorn (Prunus spinosa). This is a rather wonderful accident of nature, as the 'tree' flowers twice. The blackthorn begins in about March and the hawthorn takes over in May. In the autumn


The field maple

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 25/10/2010 16:24:11

grotesque.A smallish tree reaching only about 20m tall, the field maple has a bark as fissured as the face of W.H. Auden, with a slightly corky texture. The flowers are nothing much to write home about, being little greeny numbers that turn up at the same


Coal tits

By Richard Jones on 09/11/2011 07:52:26

It’s all looking rather still and damp in the garden now. Autumn, it seems, has come at last. Over the Guy Fawkes weekend, there were reports on iSpot and Flickr of red admirals and hoverflies visiting the sun-lit ivy, but, in my garden at least


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