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Garden bonfires: ashes to ashes

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 18/11/2008 11:12:37

' worth of detritus sitting in an open shed. Now, some of you may have seen pictures of my garden before and will have realised that there are lots of plants crammed in here. As a result there is a small mountain of stuff that I need to shred.This brings


Pollen

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 25/03/2009 09:52:10

on the internet. Might I recommend this as an alternative?The catkin is the male part of the plant. Its job is to fertilise the female part (which are little red tufts) of the plant and therefore create hazelnuts. All very straightforward, but there is a small


Building a pond

By Richard Jones on 07/07/2010 17:25:07

I've been building, not so much a garden pond, as a playground pond. And the first problem with playgrounds is that they are all-over tarmac. The obvious site for Ivydale Primary School's new pond was a sunny, but extremely bleak corner next


Protecting fruit from birds

By Adam Pasco on 04/10/2010 11:37:46

Despite summer drought in my part of the East Midlands, my apple crop has been pretty good on most trees, but there’s just one problem. A much larger proportion of fruit than ever before has been pecked on the tree itself, resulting in small holes


2011 in the garden

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 01/01/2011 06:25:58

January already: Christmas neatly tucked away and another year of fabulous gardening stretching away ahead of us. The beginning of the year is the time for fresh starts and change but, rather than pestering you with annoying resolutions which few


The insects have gone berserk

By Richard Jones on 27/04/2011 11:03:05

Dulwich, but that lead seems to be a red herring, and Saprosites natalensis is sometimes found making small chewed burrows under cut logs or pieces of garden timber.When this supposedly South African species was found in West London it took quite a time


Planting bulbs in lawns

By Adam Pasco on 31/10/2011 16:22:20

, transformed for just a few short weeks, before all trace of the bulbs is mown away.Of course, once established, bulbs will readily multiply. Planting bulbs in my own small lawn somehow isn't the same, though - my garden doesn't have the breathtaking scale


Oriental poppies

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:33:57

, they will not thrive in sodden soils - decent drainage is essential. As with any other plant, get them off to a good start by incorporating plenty of organic material, such as home-made compost. Oriental poppies will appreciate a small amount of fertiliser, but don


How to make a Christmas table decoration

By Gardeners' World on 19/07/2011 14:32:04

The crab apple, Malus'Golden Hornet', is loaded every year with small, amber-yellow fruit. By Christmas many have fallen to the ground, though the branches are still decked with copious amounts of fruit. They are decorative and versatile, and ideal


Beefsteak tomatoes

By Adam Pasco on 07/01/2008 11:04:00

Despite persevering with growing beefsteak tomatoes last summer, I was once again severely disappointed with the results. I've grown them several times over the past few years but always found their yields really small compared to normal


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