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Potatoes, broccoli and bumblebees

By Jane Moore on 23/05/2008 16:02:05

Once spring is sprung it really does get going! My plot is a mass of potato leaves creeping out over the mounds of ridged earth, seedlings sprouting sturdily out of the ground almost as I watch. But of course, there's a hearty selection of common


Slugs, rain and nematodes

By Pippa Greenwood on 05/06/2008 17:30:00

soggy mess.One advantage of the rainfall has been the success of the biological control I applied to some areas of my kitchen garden. Nematodes are added to water and applied to the soil in spring. They thrive in warm, moist soil and when they come


Raspberries and asparagus

By Jane Moore on 06/06/2008 15:46:00

, with little effort on my part.I don't know why I didn't grow asparagus, as it's really easy. Now I'll have to wait to next spring to plant some crowns, and then another couple of years before getting a decent meal out of them.


Sparrows in the garden

By Pippa Greenwood on 26/06/2008 12:46:00

, the sparrows had already moved in. We're never in any doubt when spring has sprung; the roof comes alive with the wonderful sound of new sparrow families. We can often be found peering anxiously up towards the roof to see how things are progressing


Quince for the memory

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 23/10/2007 10:58:02

Spot the odd one out from these four: 1) Quincy Jones (Music Producer who worked with Michael Jackson and Frank Sinatra). 2) Thomas de Quincey (ferociously clever writer and drug addict). 3)Quincy ME (1970s television series starring Jack Klugman


An apple a day

By Jane Moore on 26/10/2007 12:09:49

not deserve this apple tree because this year it flowered bravely in the spring. (I thought this was its final swansong and I can't tell you how guilty I felt - call myself a gardener!) So I still ignored it thinking it was still on its way out


Knowing your onions

By Jane Moore on 16/11/2007 10:07:49

to the inclement summer. Also the general web consensus seems to be that over-wintering types don't keep as well as the spring planted varieties. Oh well, it seems I still have a lot to learn!


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


Quiet beginnings

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 28/12/2007 15:14:04

and it is one of my great pleasures. The dark green leaves go perfectly with the aged brick, in the spring it is covered with frothy white flowers and come the autumn the branches are laden with red berries. When the hard frosts come we then have a wonderful


Beefsteak tomatoes

By Adam Pasco on 07/01/2008 11:04:00

-sized tomatoes.I had vowed never to bother with them again, but last spring I was tempted to sow seeds of a brand new variety sent to me to trial, and set for introduction in the 2008 seed catalogues. A new variety would be worth growing, surely?In short... no


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