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A dry spring

By Kate Bradbury on 06/05/2011 13:07:46

in local streams and rivers, promoting algae and upsetting fish, and too much can kill plants. Some detergents also contain sodium, which can inhibit plant growth. Almost all detergents contain surfactants, which help to break the water's surface tension


Pond plants

By Kate Bradbury on 26/02/2010 16:23:36

-native plants can take over our ponds and deoxygenate the water. If dumped in municipal or wild ponds, streams or rivers they can smother native plants, clog waterways, exacerbate flooding and harm fish. The website gives clear advice on identifying


Growing tomatoes: dos and don'ts

By Kate Bradbury on 11/03/2010 16:05:08

are commendable, if nothing else. There are friends who grow the plants indoors and wonder why they don't fruit (the flowers need pollinating); friends whose plants flower and fruit but the tomatoes rot at the ends (blossom end rot caused by irregular watering


Growing giant sunflowers - planting out

By Kate Bradbury on 27/05/2011 15:55:02

part. We all sowed our seeds, watered, tended and waited.Now, in late May, we should all have good, strong sunflowers ready to plant out (depending on where we live). Mine have been outside in pots for about three weeks now, but I only planted them


Growing a yew hedge

By Kate Bradbury on 25/01/2013 12:54:24

Two years, I felt the need to grow a local, native plant in my garden. I gathered rosehips from a field rose at the edge of a nearby canal, soaked them in water and sowed the seed in coarse compost.The pots sat in a corner of my patio, doing nothing


Paving over front gardens

By Kate Bradbury on 28/04/2011 15:10:39

are diminished and air quality is reduced.But most alarmingly, the risk of flooding is increased. Hard surfaces like concrete and paving don't absorb water as readily as soil and plants, so it runs into sewers. As much as 50 per cent more water ends up down


Growing veg in containers: keep it cropping

By Kate Bradbury on 05/08/2011 15:26:42

like beetroot, seed. Again, the plant will focus its energy on seed production at the expense of the leaf, or root you are growing it for. Remove flowers as soon as you see them, water well. Moving the pot to a shadier spot can also help (sun can stress


Dead frogs

By Kate Bradbury on 26/01/2010 15:33:09

survive if the pond freezes over - especially in ponds with lots of plants growing in them, as plants can still photosynthesise under ice and produce oxygen. But if there aren't sufficient oxygenating plants growing in the pond, if it contains lots of leaf


Wildlife ponds and growling frogs

By Kate Bradbury on 11/03/2013 16:24:30

.The 'shallow pond' is only 2m in diameter, with a maximum depth of 30cm and gentle sloping sides. It's planted with water forget-me-not, brooklime, and hornwort to oxygenate the water. The day after I dug the pond, my mum's garden had a month's rain in 24 hours


Frogs, ponds and winterkill

By Kate Bradbury on 22/10/2010 15:54:52

lying dormant at the bottom of ponds, where they slow down their metabolism and breathe through their skin. They can survive if the pond freezes over, but only if it has oxygenating plants growing in it (plants can still photosynthesise and produce


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