London (change)
Today 22°C / 17°C
Tomorrow 24°C / 16°C
Keywords:
Sort by:

11 to 20 of 31 results

Foraging

By Kate Bradbury on 15/07/2010 12:05:50

to make rosehip jam. Rosehips are wonderfully rich in vitamin C, and you can make all sorts of soothing concoctions from them for sore throats and colds. But we made jam. We spent about two hours cutting them up and removing all the seeds and hairs (the


Guerrilla gardening and planting tulips

By Kate Bradbury on 14/10/2011 14:50:04

removing the wild plants, perhaps the gardeners could have planted the tulips among them. Rather than tulips, spring bulbs such as crocus, snake's head fritillary and snowdrops, could have been planted to provide a much-needed early source of nectar


Growing honesty

By Kate Bradbury on 10/05/2013 12:43:42

the seed shortly after removing the paving slabs in, what until then had been the courtyard (and is now my garden). Being biennial, the plants took two years to flower. Now, however, I have flowers every year, as they sow themselves around the garden


Most hated plants

By Kate Bradbury on 19/11/2009 16:22:21

It's that time of year again when sitting on the sofa with a cup of tea and a seed catalogue is much more inviting than going outside and cleaning the greenhouse, raking up leaves or - as I found last Sunday - removing diseased, mummified plums from


Sowing seeds for a new garden

By Kate Bradbury on 31/12/2009 15:00:11

My first job when I moved into my flat last August was to remove the paving stones in the back yard. Now, after five months of having a building site for a garden, I have bought myself some Christmas topsoil, and I'm itching to get seed sowing


What to do with your old Christmas tree

By Kate Bradbury on 31/12/2010 07:02:08

bought it, so I'd take responsibility for it.The tree spent a few weeks in the garden, looking just as sad as those on the canal. Then I took the secateurs to it. I removed all the branches and gathered them together in bundles for insects to shelter in


Local plants (for local people)

By Kate Bradbury on 07/01/2011 13:26:58

, so I'll go back for them another time.)I can't wait to get sowing on the weekend. I'll remove the seeds from their (now swollen) hips and sow them in a pot of fresh compost. As the seeds require a good dose of cold, followed by a warm spell


Gardening theft

By Kate Bradbury on 04/02/2011 11:58:15

to me than the bricks and mortar), but I don't secure it in the same way. It wouldn't take much for someone to hop over the back gate, force open the shed and remove its contents. Again, there's nothing expensive inside, but it's all useful


Ivy

By Kate Bradbury on 16/09/2011 14:07:19

.Ivy is blamed for crumbling walls, broken fences and unpaid insurance claims. My dad grows it up a column that supports the roof of his porch, but he won't let it touch his house. Friends removed it from their garden because it had 'punched holes through


Growing auriculas

By Kate Bradbury on 22/03/2013 11:38:54

.We feed the plants with a little diluted comfrey solution during the growing season, and top-dress them with fresh compost (and gravel) in autumn. To prevent disease, we remove yellowing leaves as soon as we see them, and to promote further flowering we


11 to 20 of 31 results
Search time: 0.022 secs