London (change)
Today 9°C / 6°C
Tomorrow 16°C / 9°C
Keywords:
Sort by:

1 to 10 of 49 results

Watering greenhouse plants

By Adam Pasco on 27/06/2011 12:24:44

’t need to lift a finger. Automatic watering systems take the strain, leaving the busy gardener with time to tie in leading stems, pinch out side shoots and check for pests, and not lug endless watering cans into the greenhouse.I haven't checked


Fragrant plants

By Adam Pasco on 03/05/2010 08:54:02

garden to look good, and for neighbouring plants to complement one another.Walking through my garden this week I was struck by its freshness following a shower. Doesn't rain transform the colour and vigour of plants in a way simply watering by hand never


A dry spring

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

frosts.My garden in East London hasn't seen rain since before Christmas. We've had snow, of course, and the promise of rain - dark clouds, even a thunder storm, but no water (we did have a two minute shower last Friday but it by the time I recognised


Greenhouse temperatures

By Pippa Greenwood on 09/03/2011 13:16:30

failed again).The temperature has been so high during the day that I’ve had to remove the lids from two propagators, to prevent them from ‘boiling’ the seedlings. I keep a couple of watering cans close by, as the plants are guzzling water


Waiting for rain

By Pippa Greenwood on 01/06/2011 18:44:58

I know that gardeners in other areas of the country have been blessed with proper, sustained downpours, but no such luck here. My only experience of rain in recent weeks was during a (very enjoyable) visit to Garden Show Ireland at Hillsborough


December gardening jobs

By Adam Pasco on 10/12/2012 11:49:51

right away.3. Insulate outside tapNot only must I turn off the stopcock to my garden tap to isolate the water supply (mine is almost hidden behind pipework under the kitchen sink), but I must wrap insulation material round the brass tap itself. Again, I


A snow-covered garden

By Adam Pasco on 09/02/2009 15:45:38

Has the snow been a good or bad thing for our gardens? Well, probably a bit of both, but I do live in hope that the cold weather has helped kill off a few garden pests. We've all had our fair share of snow over the past couple of weeks, with varying


Winter Wonderland

By Adam Pasco on 27/12/2010 08:09:54

, and not by the gardener. However, the cold has used the skeleton of my creation to produce something unique.Spend a few minutes enjoying the scene before temperatures rise, and it's gone!Don't forget to get out each morning with a kettle of boiling water to melt ice


Snow and ice in the garden

By Pippa Greenwood on 14/01/2010 11:58:32

Yesterday at a Gardeners' Question Time recording it was amazing to hear that Eric's Cumbrian plot had only had 5cm of snow. Not so here in Hampshire. The snow is 45-60cm deep and the icicles more than 1m long!What have I been up to during the snowy


Paving over front gardens

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

the ground, so water run-off of any hard surfaces will be reduced.And if you have inherited a large expanse of paving stones and don't know what to do with it, why not take them up and plant a garden?


1 to 10 of 49 results
Search time: 0.016 secs