London (change)
Today 18°C / 13°C
Tomorrow 16°C / 10°C
Keywords:
Sort by:

1 to 10 of 17 results

Categories

Gardeners' musings (7)
Unassigned (6)
Plants (4)

Authors

James Alexander-Sinclair (17)

Date Range

More than 12 months (17)

Related Searches

Snowed in

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 10/02/2009 14:25:32

comfort and less space for carrying bags of cement. Last week I sold the most recent Land Rover in order to trade it in for a less thirsty vehicle.Big mistake. Two days later it started snowing and, at the time of writing, we're under about six inches


Flat as a pancake

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 27/11/2007 10:59:02

around 10pm and by the next morning it had all gone. All well and good except that we have a bit of a British Rail problem - it was completely the wrong type of snow. Instead of being light, fluffy cotton-woolly snow this was wet and heavy. As a result


One for the woad

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 19/05/2009 17:08:02

When I was at school we used to sing a song (to the tune of Men of Harlech) which went "Tramp up Snowdon, with our woad on. Never mind if we get rained or snowed on!" It was a sort of homage to our hardy ancestors running around painted with blue


Summer flowers: a personal Top 10

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 18/01/2010 15:20:04

I don't know about you lot but I'm extremely bored of snow, frost and cold, and I need something distinctly unwintery to lift my spirits.I could eat a lot of chocolate, which would be comforting, though probably not a very good idea if I wish


Jack Frost nipping at your nose

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 21/12/2007 17:20:00

Happy Christmas - I hope that you are all rosy of cheek, tousled of appearance and brimming with goodwill to all men, women, children and close relations.The chances that this Christmas will have snow is anybody's guess but we might get slightly


Five plants for Christmas gifts

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 06/12/2010 11:39:54

We have all been much preoccupied recently with snow and cold (especially those of us whose offices are inadequately heated, and have to sit and write with rugs around their knees, like pensioners on a Baltic cruise).The weather definitely put a


Turning over a new leaf

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 06/11/2007 08:53:02

What a glorious week it has been (with apologies to those in other places who have had torrential rain/snow/hailstones the size of gulls eggs/unseasonal drought etc).Every morning at about 7:15 we walk around the fields - with such clear skies


To chop or not to chop?

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 28/10/2008 12:26:17

the season. Which plants you cut back depends so much on personal taste and weather - lots of rain or heavy snow tends to make everything go 'flumpf' earlier (flumpf is, of course, a well-known horticultural term describing the process of plant collapse). It


Films for gardeners

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 16/12/2008 15:44:41

.The Draughtsman's Contract (1983). Beautiful Peter Greenaway film about love and lust amongst formal gardens and sweeping landscapes. Filmed at Groombridge Place in Kent, which was also used in the 2005 film of Pride and Prejudice.Green Card (1990) starring Gerard


Parsnips

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 20/12/2010 16:50:20

wins.Before the introduction of the potato to Europe in 1536, the parsnip was a much more mainstream vegetable than it is now. Parsnips are pretty easy to grow by sowing directly into the ground around March and April - dig the ground well as lumps


1 to 10 of 17 results
Search time: 0.018 secs