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9 results returned

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Gardeners' musings (3)
Plants (3)
Wildlife (3)

Authors

Kate Bradbury (9)

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More than 12 months (9)

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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


Unseasonal weather

By Kate Bradbury on 11/11/2011 12:39:58

What an odd assortment of weather we've had this year. In just 12 months my garden has experienced heavy snow, a spring heatwave followed by a drab, damp summer, then a second heatwave in autumn. Some parts of the country have experienced drought


Most loved plants

By Kate Bradbury on 11/02/2010 16:40:34

different, if it ever stops snowing. Ooh I hate the snow...


Garden birds and my Big Garden Birdwatch

By Kate Bradbury on 27/01/2011 16:01:59

no birds, despite the sparkling clean feeders and expensive food I put out for them.I'm pleased to report that this has all changed. What's more, my garden has become a battle ground. When the snow came in December, a robin and blackbird tentatively started


Dead frogs

By Kate Bradbury on 26/01/2010 15:33:09

litter (which releases noxious gases as it breaks down), or if snow covers the pond and prevents the plants from photosynthesising, gases can build up in the pond and kill the frogs.ARC suggests doing the following: make a hole in the ice by leaving a pan


Foraging

By Kate Bradbury on 15/07/2010 12:05:50

delicious soup). Before I know it I'm dodging blackberries, pears and plums on the towpath instead of ice and snow.Just last night my girlfriend came home with a bag of cherries she'd plucked from a tree in our local park. They were delicious and sweet


Saving foxglove seeds

By Kate Bradbury on 02/07/2010 17:01:47

out of its comfortable pot into some frozen snow-covered ground, but this was a ceremonial planting, which (I hoped) would symbolise the success and glory of my new garden.In March it started to produce lots of healthy foliage and a flower spike


Frogs, ponds and winterkill

By Kate Bradbury on 22/10/2010 15:54:52

oxygen under ice), or it has very little leaf litter. If there aren't sufficient oxygenating plants in the pond, or it contains too much leaf litter (which releases noxious gases as it breaks down), or snow covers the surface and prevents the plants from


A dry spring

By Kate Bradbury on 06/05/2011 13:07:46

frosts.My garden in East London hasn't seen rain since before Christmas. We've had snow, of course, and the promise of rain - dark clouds, even a thunder storm, but no water (we did have a two minute shower last Friday but it by the time I recognised


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