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Unassigned (8)

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Adam Pasco (2)
James Alexander-Sinclair (2)
Pippa Greenwood (2)
Jane Moore (1)
Richard Jones (1)

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More than 12 months (8)

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Thinning apples

By Jane Moore on 11/07/2008 13:18:00

. While I was there I thought I may as well do a couple of jobs, so I set about thinning out the fruit on the apple trees. This year my three apple trees have flowered and set fruit beautifully; the branches are laden with bunches of marble-sized fruits


Constructive destruction

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 29/07/2008 12:54:00

then you can assume that I've made a ghastly mistake and am trying to hide the outcome. If nothing else, the prunings make good compost.If you want to see what my garden looked like a month ago then tune in to Gardeners' World on BBC2 this Friday (1 August


Manure

By Pippa Greenwood on 28/03/2008 11:32:00

to discover that it was riddled with thin plastic strips, rather like the stuff you find inside a music cassette. Useless. Far too much to pick out and I certainly wasn't prepared to incorporate it into my lovely (albeit rather heavy clay) Hampshire soil


Sowing hardy annual seeds

By Pippa Greenwood on 10/04/2008 11:17:00

weeding easier. Kept adequately moist, the seeds will soon germinate, and, after thinning, the plants grow like billy-o. Hardy annuals tend to be more drought tolerant than more highly priced bedding plants, and are pretty resilient. They make for a


Your tulips were made for kissin'...

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 13/11/2007 08:53:02

by the time May comes along I am sick to the back teeth of ruddy yellow. We have been flooded by daffodils in every shape - short, tall, fat, thin etc - but every single one is yellow (yes, I know that some are creamy white but they are still tainted


Peonies

By Adam Pasco on 19/05/2008 11:00:00

to loving peonies. They have always been part of my gardening life. Our family garden in Guildford was on a slope near the Downs, on very thin free-draining soil over chalk. Peonies loved it; they didn't demand a thing from us and flourished in return


Centipedes

By Richard Jones on 30/07/2008 12:07:00

what it is. So it was when I uncovered a huge centipede, which bit me. It was one of the Cryptops species, with 21 pairs of legs. I didn't have to count them, it's just that it obviously had more than the 15 pairs possessed by the shorter and broader


Mulching with compost

By Adam Pasco on 02/06/2008 13:10:00

for the best offers on peat-free compost and mulch with that.Then there's weed control. That thick mulch provides a perfect overcoat for borders to prevent annual weed seeds germinating, but it has to be a good 7cm or more deep to be effective. Too thin


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