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10 results returned

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Unassigned (10)

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Jane Moore (5)
Pippa Greenwood (4)
Adam Pasco (1)

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More than 12 months (10)

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Wood chip paths

By Jane Moore on 18/04/2008 12:54:00

I'm rather proud of the plot at the moment. It's weeded, fed, mulched and manured, the potatoes are chitted and in, and the beds are ready. Best of all, I've just top dressed my paths with lovely wood chips, which set the whole thing off to a 'T


Plant supports for beans and sweet peas

By Pippa Greenwood on 01/05/2008 12:33:00

The weather has been pretty grotty lately, and I've had to grab every possible opportunity to get out in the garden. I don't think I've ever been so far behind with sowing and planting fruit and vegetable crops. This time last year my courgettes


Sweetcorn

By Adam Pasco on 07/07/2008 12:19:00

feed on pollen from the open flowers, and hopefully breed and lay eggs. Developing larvae then feed on aphids, acting as a form of natural pest control.When I experimented with the 'square foot vegetable plot' planting technique a couple of years ago, I


Slugs, rain and nematodes

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

vegetable plot and my newly planted squash plants were eaten over night. Now all I'm left with is a selection of decidedly miserable-looking stumps with a few scraps of leaf clinging on for dear life. Of course, the slugs are happy as can be. They're full


Clearing out the cold frame

By Jane Moore on 30/05/2008 13:05:02

the lid off the frame if I leave them much longer.Their ample growth has caused some chuckles among the other plot holders, but I must confess to being rather proud to have grown mustards that could be entered in a giant vegetable contest. You can


Late harvest

By Pippa Greenwood on 25/09/2008 12:11:00

The sun is shining, I can't believe it, and I'm pretty sure my plants can't believe it either! The warmer soil and increased light intensity have made a massive difference to my garden. Only now, towards the end of September has my vegetable plot


Knowing your onions

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

After a good few years of vegetable growing I would go so far as to say that I know a thing or two about onions and their cultivation. For instance I know that onions are prone to a nasty fungal disease called 'white rot' and I know exactly what


Gardening in gales, rain, and hail

By Pippa Greenwood on 13/03/2008 10:31:00

.Thankfully the numerous mini tunnels that adorn the vegetable plot were totally unmoved and the crops within them are perfect.


Growing courgettes and marrows

By Jane Moore on 22/08/2008 12:49:00

regularly and carefully. I even pick the courgettes when they're really quite small if I know I can't get to the plot for a while, so they don't turn into whoppers.But there always seems to be one that escapes my eagle eye, and I end up with an out


Crop rotation

By Jane Moore on 07/03/2008 11:50:00

sketch of the plot, including all the beds and other growing spaces. I photocopy this plan every year and write in which vegetable crops I'll be growing in each bed. I take care to check the plan I drew for the previous three years to make sure I


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