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Gardeners' musings (27)

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James Alexander-Sinclair (12)
Adam Pasco (6)
Kate Bradbury (5)
Pippa Greenwood (3)
Jane Moore (1)

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More than 12 months (27)

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Suppressing weeds with carpet

By Jane Moore on 29/02/2008 11:27:00

Along with the sap rising, the birds cavorting and my enthusiasm surging, the weeds are growing with a vengeance. This February has been a month of weeding on my allotment and - I'm delighted to say - the plot has never looked this good so early


Persistent weeds

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 26/02/2008 10:54:00

. Garden twine where, if you open the cellophane package the wrong way then the loose end becomes strangely elusive. All of these things are certain to put me in a very bad mood.Not so tangles of weeds; I rather enjoy the gradual teasing and tickling


Bindweed

By Adam Pasco on 10/08/2009 14:20:14

place after dandelions and horsetail), and bindweed came 2nd to dandelions in northern England. Full results of our survey of weeds and other garden problems can be found in the August 2009 issue of Gardeners' World Magazine.


Sowing a new lawn

By Kate Bradbury on 25/03/2010 13:41:28

I'm not one for manicured lawns. I think lawn weeds are pretty. I'd really like clumps of bird's foot trefoil, dandelions, daisies, creeping buttercup and self-heal growing among the grass in my garden. In fact, I've just planted some clover


Wilding the Chelsea Flower Show

By Kate Bradbury on 23/05/2011 15:20:50

In 1985, Chris Baines created the first ever wildlife garden at the Chelsea Flower Show. Apparently it caused quite a stir - wildflowers in those days were often dismissed as 'weeds' - and his medal was mistakenly inscribed "Chris Baines, for a


A gardeners' visit to Madeira

By Pippa Greenwood on 04/05/2011 17:12:42

Madeiran climate!After 10 days in the company of more than 100 keen gardeners, I feel refreshed and invigorated. The calabrese I planted the day I left has doubled in size, and the last-minute tomatoes that I planted also seem sturdy and unstoppable. So


Gardening injuries

By Kate Bradbury on 30/07/2010 17:57:23

are often higher than those for sports like football and rugby.Gardening injuries are horribly common. They normally happen in spring, when the first sunny day of the year inspires hours of weeding, pruning and digging after a winter of sitting on the sofa


Ant attack

By Pippa Greenwood on 09/08/2007 15:19:35

It may not be 'nice' it may not be kind, and it certainly isn't my normal style... but I've taken to victimising ants! Well, it's not exactly a campaign, but I have to confess that despite my usual "ants belong in the garden... they got there before


Self-seeding plants

By Adam Pasco on 01/06/2009 15:04:12

Not everything in my garden is carefully planned, and I make no excuses for having it this way. It's a wise gardener that makes room for the unexpected, and the rewards this can bring. Leave an area of soil bare and something will grow, and while


Horseflies

By Pippa Greenwood on 02/07/2009 13:52:00

of unwanted materials. But horseflies are a menace to horses and humans and no doubt a lot of other creatures too. Gardening has suddenly become a high-risk business - I seem to do more leaping about than weeding and sowing. We even have a house rule


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