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James Alexander-Sinclair (13)

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Tree buds in spring

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 12/04/2010 15:07:59

europaea) are the most delicious colour when young and feel soft and slightly damp and newborn. Sadly they quickly become leathery and the home of many millions of aphids which then proceed to drip honeydew onto anything parked beneath them.Spring is here


Frightful forsythia

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 31/03/2009 16:23:16

with daffodils in an almost unquenchable variety of shapes and colours, almost all of them shades of yellow. Given the joys of this or this or this or (almost) any one of the 20,000 available varieties, why choose a forsythia for your spring hit of yellow?It also


Look at your bulbs

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 28/04/2009 16:59:00

20,000 — so I try to visit as many of them as possible at this time of year. This is partly to see the fruits of all that labour, but also to make notes ready for the next planting season in autumn. Generally, as my family will happily tell you, I am


Trees for small gardens 2

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 19/07/2010 15:12:21

.)Malus 'Red Sentinel': one of the finest crab apples with sensational autumn colour and jewelled clusters of small red apples that cling on long after the leaves have fallen. The blossom is a fine pinky reddy white in spring.Acer davidii, the snake bark maple


Nectaroscordum of the gods

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 05/05/2009 18:04:09

than Allium species. Then they send up tall slender stems (about 1.2m) topped with a tight bud, shaped like a torpedo. Over the next few weeks this bud gets fatter and fatter, while the membrane holding it in gets thinner and more papery. Some of you


Cow parsley

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 12/05/2009 13:34:49

Absence will always make the heart grow fonder: especially in gardens. I have just got back after a few days at the Malvern Spring Show — which was, as always, great fun, pretty fabulous and completely exhausting — and it is amazing how much fuller


My garden

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 01/09/2009 11:37:36

in other parts of the garden. I planted the very luscious Dahlia 'Hillcrest Royal' to make up for the absentee monarda, it's a bit pinker but equally effective.The thalictrum has gone a bit floppy as my early spring staking was a bit shoddy in places


My five favourite dahlias

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 13/09/2010 12:13:20

I love early September: the sun is still hot but the nights are not stifling. The majority of plants have flowered and faded away but there are still some, particularly the dahlias, that are flowering their little heads off. There was a time when


The winged spindle

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 10/10/2011 16:59:01

spinning wheel and fell asleep for 100 years.But I learned about a different type of spindle on a field trip to Kew Gardens, in the autumn of 1984. I remember the moment of revelation very well. At the time I was enrolled on a 10-week gardening course (my


The geum

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 02/06/2009 14:33:55

If my calculations are right this is the 100th blog that I've written for gardenersworld.com - a mildly momentous anniversary (thank you, by the way, for reading). I've been trying to think of an appropriately significant subject about which


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