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What is happening in the garden, with an emphasis on vegetables and fruit, but not exclusively.
An Hour in the garden - week by week
An Hour in the garden - week by week
28 SEP 2018 · Welcome to An Hour in the Garden No 81
This week we take a quick look at what pots and containers we have used to grow vegetables
Plants that deter insects pests, slugs and snails
Houseplants that help clean the atmosphere
And the State of the World’s Fungi report by the RHS at Kew
23 SEP 2018 · Welcome to An Hour in the garden no 80
First of all, so sorry for last week. (Grandchildren + bug = wiped out!)
I finally got into thegarden and harvested cabbages and potatoes and spent the ‘recovery’ time watching the leaves falling, so we do into a little about how and why leaves fall - after all, it can’t just be the wind, it gets windy in the Summer too and the leaves don’t fall at all.
The thing is, for many reasons, a layer of cork appears at the end of the leaf, which is more brittle, and so consequently, the leaf eventually falls off under pressure.
Quite why is a different story. Many explanations are given, but they don’t always fit the bill, and it seems to me there are combinations of reasons for the effect.
We go on to look at some plants I am buying this autumn
Broadbean:
Aquadulce for sowing now
Oscar and Robin Hood for later
Cabbage:
Getting plants of Aprio, Wheelers Imperial and Winter Green
Plus Savoy for next year, though this year I have been sowing All Year Round
Carrot:
Aron F1, Berlicum and and Flyaway
Cauliflower:
You can’t beat the old favourite All Year Round
Celery:
Golden Self Blanching
Garlic
Bohemian Rose Wight from Prague
Carcasonne Wight - lovely flavour
Caulk Wight - pink striped from Russia
Two old favourites:
Early Purple Wight and Solent Wight
10 SEP 2018 · Time to sow in a cold frame:
ViolasÂ
Lupins we’re sowing  Dwarf fairy pink
Aquilegia, - carulea
Aconitum or monks hood or wolf’s bane
Hollyhocks creme de cassis
EryngiumÂ
Echinops
Verbascum - I think they are like hollyhocks and lavateras seeds off outdoors now either direct sown or in pots in a coldframe.
SalviasÂ
Red Hot PokersÂ
Hardy Geraniums
We have Wargrave Pink, and you can’t get rid of it! It is very invasive. But there are so many others! I quite fancy Orchid Blue and purple haze
Sow where they will grow
Poppies of all kinds
Ammi majus (Bishop's Weed))
Cornflowers
Poached Egg plant
Larkspur
What is happening in the garden, with an emphasis on vegetables and fruit, but not exclusively.
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Author | Paul Peacock |
Organization | Paul Peacock |
Categories | Earth Sciences |
Website | - |
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