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Spring flowers - my least favourites

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 25/03/2008 13:26:00

of colour and life; in the majority of cases this is to be welcomed. Hooray for the resurgence of tulips, whoopee for the return of the rose and yippee for the arrival of annuals.However, there are some plants which I am not looking forward to seeing again


Weedkiller in manure

By Jane Moore on 20/06/2008 11:51:00

, tomatoes, beans and peas. Ornamental plants, especially roses and delphiniums, are also affected. This abnormal growth has been attributed to a weedkiller, which is widely used by farmers on grassland to kill broad-leafed weeds, such as chickweeed, fat hen


Blackbirds nesting in my garden

By Adam Pasco on 17/06/2008 13:11:00

the chicks flown the nest, or had a predator struck?Last week, while inspecting my standard roses for signs of pests I was amazed to come face-to-face with another nest perched in the thorny head of the bush. It contained three small speckled blue eggs. I


Plants growing above the Arctic Circle

By Pippa Greenwood on 21/08/2008 13:03:00

't be a problem. Fantastic if you could grow roses so far north. Still, beautiful as the scenery was, I'd not swap it for our variable and often excessively wet climate, with all its rewards of tasty, tender veg we've been enjoying since our return!


In praise of woodlice

By Richard Jones on 26/11/2008 13:02:26

, because I think these creatures are rather beautiful. The normally grey rough woodlouse (Porcellio scaber) sometimes takes on a lovely rose tone; if it were a plant it would be given its own special cultivar name. And I'm always thrilled to find a


Annual climbers

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 12/10/2009 12:20:25

than plant a rose or another wisteria - there might be some unpleasantness hiding in the soil - I decided to stick with annual climbers. We usually have morning glories (Ipomoea species) in pots, so I moved one of them to fill in and it did an admirable


Chrysanthemums

By Adam Pasco on 19/10/2009 15:00:23

close second only to roses, according to a recent survey of florists. And as with any 'easy-to-grow' plant, it divides gardeners in the same way that gladioli, dahlias and many others do.Horticultural snobs may give them a wide berth as they search out


RHS Wisley

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 15/03/2010 15:10:43

or greenhouse then it is well worth the effort.There is always something going on at Wisley, some sort of new development or improvement, and this time it is the continuing construction of a new rose garden designed by multi-Gold medal winner, Robert Myers


Tree buds in spring

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 12/04/2010 15:07:59

, for those of you who have not met it before, is the most phenomenally over-the-top cherry tree. A vast amount of frothy white blossom that is spectacular for a week or so in May.Here are the first leaves of Rosa rugosa 'Snowdon', a wildish rose that I have


Edible flowers

By Adam Pasco on 28/06/2010 17:39:36

perfectly in a rustic bowl of mixed leaves. Or try bittercress, that ubiquitous weed that seems to arrive as a 'free sample' with many garden centre purchases.So, whether you want delicate viola flowers in a salad or would like to try crystallising rose


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