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Gardeners' musings (5)
Wildlife (3)
Unassigned (2)

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James Alexander-Sinclair (10)

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More than 12 months (10)

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Garden wildlife

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 11/10/2010 13:22:55

of the last flowers.Anyway, I tell you all this not only to entertain you with tales of my day but also to demonstrate the fact that this garden teems with wildlife. Apart from those mentioned we have birds a-go-go, the odd hedgehog and there is a grass snake


Future Gardens and Butterfly World

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 04/08/2009 14:59:06

. How difficult was that? Looks very hard but let me talk you through the process, step by step:1. Buy seeds2. Disturb ground.3. Sow Seeds3. Go back inside.4. Wait. (There is an option of pouring oneself a cool something at this point in the proceedings


Gardening blogs of the world

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 15/07/2008 13:21:00

insects, vegetables and wildlife.You Grow Girl is Canadian, has been going since 2000, and covers pretty much everything.For some reason Austin, Texas seems to teem with garden bloggers - there are at least thirty of them. For a taste of gardening where


Gardeners' World Live highlights

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 10/06/2009 15:38:04

the same lines, is Credit Munch by Birmingham City Council. It is a lush and overflowing vegetable garden with extra plants placed for the benefit of visiting insects and assorted wildlife.Another gold medal-winning garden was the unbelievably colourful


The National Gardens Scheme

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 06/06/2011 14:17:38

(this is Wales after all), play host to a string quartet on the day. There are also demonstrations of coppicing, charcoal burning and yurt building. This is a two-day opening, on 11-12 June.Many villages combine their gardens in order to make a proper


Out and about in autumn

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 14/10/2008 15:09:00

woodland in Yorkshire. Acidic soil makes for much brighter autumn colours.Lytes Cary, Somerset: one of the smaller, more intimate National Trust properties. There are lots of autumn activities including wildlife trails around the gardens and estate


Muntjac deer

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 30/12/2008 08:49:00

I'm spluttering with indignation.In the dozen or so years that we've gardened here, I've boasted that we've been almost completely free of mammalian vermin: a rabbit emerged once but our two (very efficient) Tibetan terriers soon resolved


Plants on railway embankments

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 05/08/2008 12:33:00

maintenance team and trespasser), which provides a habitat for wildlife. In more urban areas there are escapees from people's gardens - for example on the route to London from my house there's a great swathe of trackside covered with Fallopia baldschuanicum


Free range chickens

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 22/01/2008 11:29:00

If you have been struck by the sad plight of the battery hen recently and wish to do something about it then remember one important fact: chickens are rubbish gardeners. Forget the fanciful notion you had of having fluffy feathered folk strutting


Creating a pond

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 02/08/2010 08:23:38

as great gobbets of turf and topsoil are heaped into enormous piles and then, slowly, from the chaos, a pond emerges.I know this is very different from many people's experience of building a pond as this is a garden which is bigger than most


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