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Nectarine
My nectarine growing in a pot has had a great deal of flowers but I noticed now some leaves are twisted and tinged red. Could this be a pest of some sort?  Morning CLER Its a disease called peach leaf curl....nectarines same family.  It's caused by CLER
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19/05/2013 08:33:58
by Verdun
Nectarine leaf curl & a bare pergola
: will it recover and if so, how do I treat it for leaf curl? Next, I have only the nectarine growing in the garden, the rest is gravel, paving and a pergola sitting on gravel.  The pergola is in need of something growing, to cover its skeletal appearance by RicR
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36
18/06/2013 00:08:09
by Verdun
nectarines
at home, they just get soft - not the same thing at all  Ah well, enough reason to live here. They're big and fat and juicy. It runs down your chin. Sluuurrrrrrp. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/gardening/howtogrow/3349116/How-to-grow-Peaches-and-nectarines by bec2
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48
27/08/2012 17:21:28
by Leggi
Peach tree
if that's possible or within season) I've not grown peaches (yet) so can't offer any personal experiences, but this website should be helpful http://www.rhs.org.uk/Gardening/Grow-Your-Own/Fruit-A-to-Z/Peaches---nectarines I bought a peach tree a couple by thisisme
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109
16/07/2012 19:35:19
by thisisme
Talkback: Grow Yourself Healthy 2011
shall give her some of my well-grown sweet corn plants and any surplus produce she is not growing herself. Self-sufficiency is not quite that. Co-operation is needed and lots of friends! I have a dwarf peach tree & a dwarf nectarine tree which I grow by happymarion
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28/11/2011 18:43:24
by Pauline
Talkback: Peach leaf curl
Poppy's mum. Expert i am not !     But i understand that Peach leaf curl is caused by a virus ? spread very early in the year by cold wet rain !?   I've planted & lost grafted standard plants (good that you had fruit !) I left them & are now growing back by daffodiljj
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596
14/06/2012 10:31:43
by Susan Alexander
Talkback: Stone me!
try the taste test too as I rather enjoy apples that are just a little bit un-ripe as far as the official opinion goes! I have a small patio and decking area and would like to grow fruit trees, perhaps apples and pears, in pots. Do I look by Susan St James
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28/11/2011 18:29:53
by Tracey F
Talkback: Protecting plants from frost
Hi, I am a new gardener and not sure if it is to late to prune shrubs and over grown trees! The garden still has lots of green and two wks ago new buds on shrubs? Please help! I have a cold greenhouse, but would like to grow veg over the winter by happymarion
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153
28/11/2011 18:44:20
by happymarion
Talkback: Apple harvest
year, all lost in a late, windy spring day. I live in East Anglia. You will need to protect flowers from wind and frost, and also need to pollinate flowers on apricots, peach and nectarine with a soft brush. If bees aren't around to pollinate flowers by Ian Galland
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44
28/11/2011 18:37:26
by kay Curtis
Talkback: Rotten apples
himself to strawberries, keeps an eye out for windfall cherries, is looking forward to the peaches and nectarines, and he and the squirrels have had all the hazelnuts between them. believe it or not he taught us about the location of pine nuts, and as long by Del Richards
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88
28/11/2011 18:30:26
by ronshep

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