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Achimene - hot water plants

By Adam Pasco on 17/03/2008 11:49:00

, all of which make ideal pot plants for the home, greenhouse or conservatory.Victorian gardeners believed achimene must be watered with tepid rather than cold water, hence their common name of hot water plant. I'm not convinced this is actually


Newts and pond water

By Richard Jones on 02/07/2008 11:14:00

We have newtpoles. Or rather we have newtlets, since they have already lost their external gills and grown legs. The first was just hanging from the water surface, but disappeared down into the gloom with vigorous wiggling of its tail. Since


Jersey tiger moth

By Richard Jones on 03/08/2007 10:57:49

Just a couple of days after last week's posting, my own specimen of the Jersey tiger moth was flying about in the front garden. I was putting up a 'rustic' wooden arch over the front gate so that the Chinese Virginia creeper, Parthenocissus henryana


Sweetcorn

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

've installed a new underground watering system connected to a water butt. If it works well then I'll be featuring the system in my What to do now pages in Gardeners' World Magazine next year.For now everything looks promising, but one thing still bothers me


Growing fruit - protecting strawberries

By Gardeners' World on 16/12/2008 16:01:31

them well watered in dry weather.Clean straw or synthetic mulch fabricProtective nettingSeep hose (optional)April - June 20 minutesharvest from June to JulyWeed around your strawberry plants and remove any dead or dying leaves. Lift the foliage


Blanket weed in garden ponds

By Richard Jones on 03/09/2008 13:57:00

After the frantic time of summer holidays, when it's as much as I can do to remember to mow the lawn occasionally or throw a bucket of water on anything that's drooped dangerously, we are edging back to the normal routines of work, school and ... a


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


An apple a day

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

I love a good bargain and always like to have a quick scour through the bargain basement section of my local garden centre every time I'm there. Most of the time this perusal is fruitless - everything has completely had it or it's something I wouldn


Frogs and slugs

By Adam Pasco on 25/08/2008 11:23:00

A plea rings out from gardeners across the country every year for a reliable control for slugs - something that will put an end to their slimy antics. Perhaps I'm in a lucky minority, but despite not having a pond my garden is hopping with frogs


Plants for shade

By Adam Pasco on 05/05/2008 11:04:00

the right plant for the right place can be a difficult task, and the reality is that often the site we have is far from ideal.Take the left-hand border in my garden. A beautiful silver birch sits close to the boundary fence, but at about 10m or more


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