Day 111: dog's mercury

This is Dog’s mercury (Mercurialis perennis). Fond of shady glades, it appears in early spring often in the company of new hellebore leaves, which it attempts rather sneakily to mimic…

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Day 110: Primula 'Blue Sapphire'

Having extolled the virtues of our wild primrose (Day 72) – which perfectly matched the mood of early March – I’m finding the stronger April light is calling for something a bit more gregarious, and Primula ‘Blue Sapphire’ fits the bill nicely…

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Day 109: Paeonia mlokosowitschii

You know that annoying thing when people from different ethnic backgrounds end up getting called ‘Fred’ because no one can be bothered to pronounce their name correctly? It happens to plants too…

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Day 108: a place to sit

Seating is one of the most overlooked aspects of the garden. I’m not talking about deckchairs and sun loungers, nor even patio furniture – that’s all very well and purpose-specific…

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Day 107: Euphorbia polychroma

There is probably a spurge for every occasion in the garden – indoors too, for that matter, when you consider that the poinsettia is a member of the Euphorbia clan…

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Day 106: wallflowers

Wallflowers are one of the plants I remember from my childhood – rows of deep oranges, yellow and reds along the garden path, and that gorgeous scent that fills the whole garden.

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Day 105: amelanchier light

We are lucky to have a back garden that faces west. This came about by the happiest of accidents – it certainly wasn’t on our house-hunting criteria – but it means that we get to enjoy the evening light as the sun slips below the horizon…

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The Gardens, weeds & words podcast, Series 1 Episode 9

Gardening has something to offer everyone – but there’s a danger it can come across either as a slightly exclusive club with its own language, or even an irrelevance. I’m joined by Sara Venn, the woman behind Incredible Edible Bristol, to talk about access, representation, and just who gardening is for.

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Day 104: fern unfurling

I don’t care what you think you’ve achieved; if you’ve not sat and gazed at a fern unfurling, you’ve not yet lived…

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Day 103: Dead wood

We felled a young ash sapling last weekend that had shot up with indecent speed in a corner of the garden. Most of its wood will be bound for the log store, but some will stay at the back of the plot…

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Day 102: snake's-head fritillary

I come over all unnecessary when the snake’s-head fritillaries (Fritillaria meleagris) are out – the white variety is charming, but you really need the contrast of the darker purple to appreciate the chequered markings to the fullest extent…

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Day 101: purple periwinkle

This is the flower that cured me of my indifference to vinca. One glimpse of that little, deep violet face peering up at me from a tangle of small, dark green leaves, and I was hooked…

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Day 100: Tulipa turkestanica

Species tulips are a bit special. Smaller, a touch more refined and less showy than the big blousey hybrids that we all love…

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Day 99: going to seed

It’s almost ‘job done’ for this hellebore, Helleborus x sternii – a beautiful hybrid between the holly-leaved and the Majorcan hellebore…

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Day 98: sea kale

It appears most unlikely that anything as lush and floriferous as sea kale (Crambe maratima) could grow on the shingle shores of Dungeness, but it seems to like it here…

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Day 97: groundsel

I try to make a habit of being on the side of weeds, but it’s hard to love groundsel (Senecio vulgaris) …

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Day 96: dewdrops on lupins

Lupins don’t reach their full show-stopping potential till next month, at which point their colourful spires take centre stage in the beds and borders…

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Day 95: mind your own business

So many great things about this little cushion of green with its tiny leaves, not least being able to say “mind your own business” to people when they enquire after its name…

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Day 94: Helleborus 'Hillier Hybrid Slate'

Plant breeders can be an optimistic lot. So much so that it’s not uncommon for flowers touted as ‘black’ to require the most strenuous act of imagination to be seen as anything other than a darkish kind of purple…

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Day 93: Chionodoxa sardensis

You could, if you were feeling argumentative, get into a barney over whether these are Chionodoxa or Scilla sardensis…

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