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Growing sweet peas

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 20/06/2011 17:47:30

grassy bank. The flowers are strong purple and pink and it is a wonderful sight. I wish I had a photograph but driving while taking plant portraits tends to be frowned upon by the constabulary in these parts. It is easy to grow, needing only sunshine


Scraping the barrel

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 07/08/2007 09:38:02

confection that really should have been immediately composted as soon as the first flower showed. The raspberry rippled pink and white collar would be almost acceptable as camouflage for plankton but when teamed with the urine yellow centre it ventures


Plants for winter colour

By Pippa Greenwood on 30/10/2008 13:14:44

We’ve finished clearing out all the summer containers and started replanting them with winter bedding. I really love potting up plants, especially in late-autumn and winter when any dash of colour is welcome in the garden.A trip to our local market


Snowdrop season

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 27/01/2009 14:59:59

My snowdrops are at the point where it is possible to start spotting them among the long grass. Not much longer to wait and they will be in full flower: tiny, green-spotted delights to lift the sombre mood of both recession and late-January. When we


Ornamental grasses

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:30:47

and arching heads of pretty, delicate white flowers. Plant it in sun or part, damp shade (although it will cope with drier conditions).Luzula nivea (Snowy woodrush)Light and airy, with green and cream foliage and pink flowers, Miscanthus sinensis 'Morning


Blue-flowering bulbs

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:28:44

name of glory of the snow, this bulb comes into flower early. In Devon I've seen it pushing its bright blue, white-centred stars up through snow in a little cultivated wood. It spreads every year and forms a glorious blue carpet beneath the trees


Snowdrops

By Adam Pasco on 24/01/2011 16:13:00

close-up and personal with more unusual varieties than the common Galanthus nivalis, perhaps I would be converted.Don’t get me wrong. Over the years I’ve had passions for particular plants, such as pineapple flowers (Eucomis), but I haven’t gone so far


Gardening and cigarette cards

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 03/03/2009 08:09:20

, laying lawn edging and root pruning cordon fruit trees (while, apparently wearing a pair of white cricket trousers and a double-breasted blazer!). The best tip is for a slug trap: "take an old photographic negative and a piece of tin. Solidified


The winged spindle

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 10/10/2011 16:59:01

plants, but Euonymus alatus was probably the first. Hailing from China and Japan, it is slow-growing, and deciduous. The greenish-white flowers appear in spring and, for much of the year, it is a green, innocuous-looking shrub.However, in autumn


Look at your bulbs

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 28/04/2009 16:59:00

major disaster has come to light. Due to a mix up in the bulb warehouse, a batch of tulips that should have been pure white Tulipa 'Purissima' turned out to be unidentified huge-flowered red things, which do not agree at all with the neighbouring pink


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