London (change)
Today 10°C / 6°C
Tomorrow 9°C / 6°C
Keywords:
Sort by:

7 results returned

Categories

Gardeners' musings (4)
Wildlife (2)
Plants (1)

Authors

Kate Bradbury (7)

Date Range

More than 12 months (7)

Related Searches

Gardening to reduce your carbon footprint

By Kate Bradbury on 29/01/2010 17:20:48

and food miles. Reducing, reusing and recycling gardening sundries and using sites like Freecycle result in less waste going to landfill. And then there's the peat issue. Peat bogs lock in CO2, preventing it from escaping into the earth's atmosphere, so


Building a green roof

By Kate Bradbury on 18/11/2011 15:00:08

, leading to flooding. If every building had a green roof - be it an office block or garden bin store - much of this water would be absorbed before it even hit the ground.My shed has a tiny, steep roof, so we needed to make sure any soil that was added


Wilding the Chelsea Flower Show

By Kate Bradbury on 23/05/2011 15:20:50

In 1985, Chris Baines created the first ever wildlife garden at the Chelsea Flower Show. Apparently it caused quite a stir - wildflowers in those days were often dismissed as 'weeds' - and his medal was mistakenly inscribed "Chris Baines, for a


Snow plants

By Kate Bradbury on 07/01/2010 16:25:39

Oh snow, where were you in London on Christmas day? Why are you here now, hampering our efforts to burn off mince pies through brisk gardening? There's nothing I can do in my garden, except ponder when the compost heap will start breaking down again


Gardening for bats

By Kate Bradbury on 22/07/2011 16:56:22

garden, and am looking forward to lots more after watching one laying eggs in my lawn last week.)Bats typically roost in caves, tall trees, roofs of houses and barns, but they will choose anywhere they deem suitable. My cousin often has bats roosting


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


Bumblebees and wax moth

By Kate Bradbury on 01/07/2011 12:11:26

A few weeks ago I wrote about moving a bumblebee nest from a friend's garden. At the end of the blog I mentioned that I'd found a wax moth in the nest.Wax moth is a native, natural predator of the bumblebee, but it's one of its biggest enemies


7 results returned
Search time: 0.018 secs