Day 17: beech

All credit to the beech tree (Fagus sylvatica) for giving us blocks of soft, coppery brown throughout winter…

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Day 16: borlotti beans

The beautiful borlotti bean, its white pods and beans splashed liberally with vermillion…

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Day 15: berberis

Loathed by gardeners for its evil thorns that will penetrate the thickest of gloves…

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Day 13: goosegrass

Without doubt one of the true survivors, stems of goosegrass, or cleavers, or (my favourite) ‘Sticky Willy’…

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Day 11: jade necklace vine

Some plants are simply fascinating with their sheer originality of colour and form, and building a collection of house plants allows you to get up close and personal with some truly different specimens…

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Day 9: buying seeds

Have you bought your seeds yet? I’ve yet to inventory my current collection…

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Day 7: mahonia

With its holly-like leaflets and often tall, imposing stature, Mahonia stands about for much of the year looking like a prickly garden cousin of the nightclub bouncer…

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Day 6: hairy bittercress

Hairy bittercress, Cardamine hirsuta, is a tiny cousin of the cabbage that grows with remarkable success right through winter…

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Day 5: bare-root roses

They don’t look much just now – a bundle of prickly sticks with a tangle of brown roots….

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Day 4: beauty in the wreckage

Beauty in the wreckage, Dan Pearson calls it. The dead stuff you could have tidied away in autumn…

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Day 3: galvanised steel

Blue-grey, white fleckled, preferably with a bit of moss and algae – there’s nothing quite like the patina of galvanised steel in the garden, particularly in winter…

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The Gardens, weeds & words podcast, Series 1 Episode 5

For episode 5 of the Gardens, weeds & words podcast, I’m joined by Kate Bradbury, author of Wildlfe Gardening and The Bumblebee Flies Anyway, to talk about the wildlife in our gardens, and our relationship to it. There’s the usual seasonal garden sountrack, a micro review of two more of my favourite gardening books, and some really bad piano playing. So, all in all, a fitting way to see out the year. I do hope you’ll join me.

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Root, Nuture, Grow

House of Plants, the first book from Caro Langton and Rose Ray, was beautifully produced and packed full of personal reflections, inspiration and practical advice. I couldn’t wait to find out if their new title could build upon the success of its predecessor. Read on to find out how it measures up.

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The Gardens, weeds & words podcast, Series 1 Episode 4

It’s not every day you get to share a podcast episode with a furry critter, which is probably what the Telegraph's Alice Vincent thought when I appeared in her Skype app. It’s definitely what I thought when squirrels began to throw themselves upon the plants on Alice’s balcony as we recorded – perfectly timed to demonstrate just some of the tribulations of gardening 60 feet up.

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