Gardeners and rabbits rarely coexist in harmony, and while there’s no denying their cuteness, they don’t half munch through your plants…
Read moreDay 73: paeony buds
All winter long I’ve been galumphing merrily across the borders, working from boards most of the time…
Read moreDay 72: wild primrose
There’s a lot of pizazz about the primula family…
Read moreDay 71: the mark of cane
In the borders, we’re enjoying the calm before the storm – old stems cut down, shabby leaves pulled away, all the remnants of last year’s garden carted off to the compost…
Read moreDay 70: lungwort
Pink, or blue. Lungwort (Pulmonaria officinalis) can’t seem to make up its mind…
Read moreDay 69: ground ivy
The evergreen ground ivy (Glechoma hederacea) is beginning to flex its muscles in beds, borders and lawns…
Read moreDay 68: Euphorbia characias subsp. wulfenii
For years I put up with an inferior euphorbia. Don’t ask me why. I’d meant to plant Euphorbia characias subsp. wulfenii …
Read moreDay 67: Begonia luxurians
Those who have a thing for plants will tell you, there are worse habits to have – it’s far easier on the pocket, for example, than a passion for vintage Porsches or posh handbags…
Read moreDay 66: nesting birds
Mrs Blackbird surveys my gardening activity from out of a dark, gold-rimmed eye…
Read moreDay 65: yew pollen
I happened to glance at my yew hedge the other day, only to see it surrounded by a golden haze, shifting in the breeze…
Read moreDay 64: lawn edging
There is nothing in the garden quite like edging, and edging a lawn in particular…
Read moreDay 63: purple-leaved plum
Everyone should all plant a cherry tree, for the joy of its flowers in spring, and its shade in the summer…
Read moreDay 62: perennial nettle
Forget the flowers – maybe the truest sign of spring’s arrival is that moment when the perennial nettles (Urtica dioica) begin to leaf up.
Read moreDay 61: chilli seedlings
I’m a little behind with my chilli seedlings, only just sowing them now. There’s just time – chillies like a long season, and I would have been better off starting them off on a window ledge in February…
Read moreDay 60: kentia palm
The change from winter to spring brings a tricky little step-change into the life of the houseplant collector..
Read moreDay 59: Verbena bonariensis
Verbena bonariensis is one of that category of plants that usefully give you height, without completely obscuring your view…
Read moreDay 58: Iris reticulata
The first proper flash of blue in the year, Iris reticulata has to be one of the highlights of February…
Read moreDay 57: cardoon corpses
have a weakness for cardoons (Cynara cardunculus). Every aspect of the things fills me with delight…
Read moreDay 56: winter aconite
It’s all terribly sophisticated in the winter-spring flower bed – until the winter aconites (Eranthis) turn up…
Read moreDay 55: couch grass
Familiar to every allotment holder, couch grass (Elymus repens) romps with unabashed glee through untended flower and vegetable beds…
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