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Gardeners' musings (3)
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Grow & eat (1)
Plants (1)
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Adam Pasco (8)

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More than 12 months (8)

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Snails and song thrushes in the garden

By Adam Pasco on 08/03/2010 14:58:51

When a letter starts "I must strongly protest at an article written by Adam Pasco…" then I do wonder what I've done wrong.Let me set the scene. You can't find much more of a bird lover than me. Just take a look at my garden, and the way I garden


Controlling slugs and snails with copper

By Adam Pasco on 06/07/2009 10:38:37

to pesticides where possible, so I don't use slug pellets. This season I've discovered the versatility of copper in my battle with Britain's No.1 garden pest. It's been found that copper rings and tape provide an effective barrier across which slugs and snails


Perfect hostas

By Adam Pasco on 11/05/2009 17:29:06

nigrescens, pictured above, looks stately and structural — a simple feature anyone could replicate.Growing hostas in pots is also great for anyone troubled by slugs and snails — and who isn't? In addition to H. nigrescens, I grow a host of other hostas


Organic pest control

By Adam Pasco on 28/09/2007 09:10:01

greenhouse cucumbers always succumb to red spider mite. Hostas act like a magnet to the local snail population.Well, I'm not having this! I've been fighting back, organically of course, especially on crops I'm going to eat or feed the family.How disappointing


Blackbirds nesting in my garden

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

. Telltale empty snail shells indicate its presence, highlighting its welcome role in natural pest control. I wish these new offspring a long and rewarding life foraging for pests in my garden.


Garden frost

By Adam Pasco on 12/01/2009 09:17:49

hope they've discovered a few more overwintering slugs and snails.Frost will certainly have proved beneficial to my clay soil. Left roughly dug in autumn the frost will have penetrated deeply, helping to break down the clay particles and making the soil


Growing strawberry plants

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

conditions encourage early fruiting, and if planted in hanging baskets, strawberry plants are less likely to be attacked by slugs and snails.Don't forget that cunning blackbirds, with their keen sense of smell, can find their way into greenhouses through open


Frogs and slugs

By Adam Pasco on 25/08/2008 11:23:00

). For now, the important thing to remember is that frogs, toads, hedgehogs and birds can all help the gardener in the battle against slugs and snails, but if you don't have pests to feed these welcome predators they're not going to take up residence


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