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Gardeners' musings (10)
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James Alexander-Sinclair (20)

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Sharing gardens and vegetable plots

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 05/01/2010 15:18:21

. It is time to bounce into 2010 with a light step and the feeling that valleys can be crossed in a single bound.Many people will have decided that the time has come to start growing their own vegetables. All those excellent Gardeners World projects and blogs


Top of the veg

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 22/11/2007 08:53:02

My father tells a story of when he was in the army. A particularly pompous officer lifted the lid of a dish of vegetables and snorted "carrots are not an officer's vegetable" before storming off.I mention this in light of a brief discussion I had


Parsnips

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 20/12/2010 16:50:20

wins.Before the introduction of the potato to Europe in 1536, the parsnip was a much more mainstream vegetable than it is now. Parsnips are pretty easy to grow by sowing directly into the ground around March and April - dig the ground well as lumps


The ornamental cabbage

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 23/11/2009 14:06:12

It's easy to be sniffy about the ornamental cabbage. It is quite a strange concept; an odd, Frankensteinish amalgam of vegetable and bedding plant. However, my mind was changed - temporarily at least - during a recent trip to New York. I saw


Bonsai trees

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 16/06/2008 14:12:00

) was of a Chinese juniper 1.5m tall and 3.5m wide growing in a small, overcrowded garden. Over a period of years it was dug up, pruned and replanted until it fitted into a pot. The whole process took about a quarter of a century and is far from over.The art


Starting a veg patch

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 01/08/2011 09:59:33

My elder son Archie made his first vegetable garden this year, in the back garden of a slightly scummy, student infested house in deepest Peckham. It was a very enterprising community effort by all of his housemates, involving sporadic (though manic


My five favourite dahlias

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

the dahlia was persona non grata in our gardens and was banished to the vegetable garden, where it was grown purely as a cut flower or for competitions. Dahlias were they garden equivalent of battery hens. Now they range happily through our borders bringing


'Grow Your Own' Week: Forest gardening

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 29/03/2010 10:24:02

Good morning and happy 'Grow Your Own' Week to you all.There are, I have to admit, many other gardeners who are hotter on vegetable growing than me. Give me herbaceous borders and I can muddle through and make them look pretty good, but when


Gardeners' World Live highlights

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 10/06/2009 15:38:04

built himself from plants and hard landscape materials that he has begged and borrowed.I am not a manic vegetable grower (my wife is in charge of our kitchen gardening) but there is a very strong vegetable presence at the show. Tucked away down the end


Gardening blogs of the world

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 15/07/2008 13:21:00

insects, vegetables and wildlife.You Grow Girl is Canadian, has been going since 2000, and covers pretty much everything.For some reason Austin, Texas seems to teem with garden bloggers - there are at least thirty of them. For a taste of gardening where


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