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9 results returned

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Grow & eat (9)

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Pippa Greenwood (5)
Kate Bradbury (2)
Adam Pasco (1)
Jane Moore (1)

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More than 12 months (9)

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Slug eggs

By Pippa Greenwood on 07/09/2011 18:01:30

at the weekend, it was plain to see that the local slugs were showing no signs of slowing down. I uncovered several large clumps of their eggs; clear or slightly off-white spheres, each about 1-2mm in diameter (pictured, above). I gathered the eggs up in a pot


Dealing with slugs and snails

By Pippa Greenwood on 02/11/2011 12:54:15

because the birds don’t expect the strawberries to be there, or maybe there are plenty of other fruits to get their beaks around.The same can’t be said of the molluscs, which are out in force, enjoying the unusually mild and moist conditions. The slugs


Gardeners World Live 2009

By Pippa Greenwood on 11/06/2009 11:34:34

. This means that one minute I'm talking to someone from Cornwall, the next minute to someone from Scotland - gardeners from all over the country.There is so much to see and do. I've been talking about growing vegetables on the 'Taste of Greenacre' stage


Hens in the vegetable patch

By Pippa Greenwood on 22/01/2009 16:56:01

putting our hens to good use in the vegetable garden. I now regularly march them out of their run to the plot, where they scrabble around and polish off a lot of grubs, including slugs. It's great for them as they get a change of scenery and lots


Carrot crisis

By Jane Moore on 18/07/2007 10:56:00

for something easier to grow like courgettes. I think it's a combination of cooler temperatures slowing down germination and the wet weather increasing slug and snail populations beyond belief - certainly around the misty damp hills of Bath anyhow! I wonder


Growing strawberry plants

By Adam Pasco on 09/03/2009 14:03:21

growing strawberries in pots. If I had more space outside, I'd build a 'berry bed' with a proper net-clad frame over it to keep birds away from ripening fruits. Blackbirds in particular have a nose for strawberries. They're not very good at sharing, so


Harvesting soft fruit

By Pippa Greenwood on 29/06/2011 11:16:41

and our resident vole have also had their fair share. The vole does test my patience, as it harvests more than it actually eats and makes a series of ‘larders’ – small mounds of neatly cut fruit! I’m too soft to do anything about it, though, and I’m quite


'Grow Your Own' Week: Getting started

By Kate Bradbury on 01/04/2010 09:20:33

first venture into growing fruit and veg, and the many mistakes I made while progressing to the level I'm at today (pretty good, I think). It's been a steep learning curve.For a brief spell, aged 11, I had a vegetable patch of my own. My mother – a


Growing veg in containers - garden pests

By Kate Bradbury on 10/06/2011 16:35:44

I've a confession to make: my efforts at growing veg in pots, as part of this year's Grow Yourself Healthy campaign, haven't been a great success. The French beans I sowed indoors germinated well, but as soon as I moved the pot outside, Sid


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