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How to maintain your lawn mower

By Gardeners' World on 20/07/2011 11:45:34

lawnHow to mow a lawnCutting a clean lawn edgeBrowse a selection of grass varietiesView plants by soil type


How to make a bamboo water hammer

By Gardeners' World on 22/07/2011 12:18:07

of the reservoir and use a spirit level to check it's even before you fill the gaps with soil.Pour a little water into the bamboo arm and check that it falls into the reservoir. Mark the position of the hammer and dig a hole for it.Fill the hole with concrete


How to water your plants

By Gardeners' World on 22/07/2011 12:25:05

into the soil.Micro-drip irrigation systems can be installed to deliver water directly to where the plants can use it. Applied slowly, water gradually soaks to the roots, rather than running off or evaporating. It will save you time and reduce the amount


Great value dahlias

By Adam Pasco on 20/08/2007 10:58:02

thing is just how you can ignore them and they'll still flourish. Despite my heavy clay soil I've just left them in the ground, and they've grown up again every summer. If I was more conscientious I would have spread a mulch of compost over the area


Free range chickens

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 22/01/2008 11:29:00

around your garden grazing on aphids and slugs. If you let full-sized hens into your borders then they will kick soil all over the shop and peck large holes in the emerging shoots of your most precious plants. Bantams are less destructive, but if the main


Weeding songs

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 04/03/2008 10:54:00

of my great pleasures is weeding while listening to my iPod. So easy to use and no danger of ruining it by squishing soil into the springs or weeds into the woofers. Sometimes I have random music so it can easily flit from Rachmaninov to Radiohead, Gogol


Insects on compost heaps

By Richard Jones on 28/05/2008 13:14:00

harvest of rich dark soil ... full of egg shells. Oh well. They soon get broken into pieces as we mulch them in; they'll help improve the drainage.


Rhododendrons on the rampage

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 22/07/2008 13:04:00

its vigorous suckers (and copious amounts of seed) can easily become a problem. Each plant can cover many square metres of ground and on Colonsay (and other areas of west Scotland) it thrives on the acid soil and is taking over great swathes


Gardeners' World - Toby Buckland

By Adam Pasco on 13/08/2008 15:18:00

, he'll have Berryfields to work on too, and he says he can't wait to get his hands in the soil there.The first time I ever met Toby was at the Cambridge University Botanic Garden where he was working, and I remember admiring the willow-woven raised bed


Gardening books

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 26/08/2008 12:07:00

relevance to my everyday gardening but I enjoy having them anyway. In this list I include old books like Gardening For Ladies which was published in 1851. It includes some wonderful stuff: for example in the chapter on Digging (Stirring the Soil


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