If you are nothing like me, you are keen to travel at your expense to plant a tree for someone else, then go home and never see the blooming tree again The reason for this is naturally your noble character and love for the Cornish countryside, dear Reader, but who could say no to a… Continue reading Plant a Tree in Cornwall this Winter
HortWeek ‘End of Peat’ Podcast Series 1 & 2
HortWeek, the coolest name in the industry, produces 4 part peat-free garden podcast extravaganza Ashridge went through the Peat Free Thing on our nursery ages ago, so we can sit back and take it easy while everyone else sweats on this one. But for growers and gardeners across the UK, moving away from peat is… Continue reading HortWeek ‘End of Peat’ Podcast Series 1 & 2
Britain’s Other Greatest Trees
In what can only be a direct response to our post on the Skippinish Oak being made the Woodland Trust’s Tree of the Year, The Telegraph scrambled to release their article on Britain’s 20 greatest trees In our post on the Skippinish Oak yesterday, we allegedly uncovered an alleged scheme by Big Oak to take… Continue reading Britain’s Other Greatest Trees
Oak Tree is UK Band Manager of the Year
After being voted Tree of the Year 2024, an old Oak has promoted the Scottish ceilidh band Skipinnish from stardom to mega stardom Woodland Trust’s Tree of the Year vote was won this year by a Sessile Oak tree called Skipinnish, after a Scottish ceilidh band. Under the tree’s management, they are now the most… Continue reading Oak Tree is UK Band Manager of the Year
Homes & Gardens Outdated Garden Trends
Homes & Gardens has so many interesting articles, we really should steal them more often. This pair of articles about outdated back garden trends and outdated front garden trends are nice for fertilising one’s thinking about one’s garden, its compartments, and the ancient “what I want” VS “what I, or my husband, will work or… Continue reading Homes & Gardens Outdated Garden Trends
November Forecast Mild at First
With nights mostly over 7C (the temperature under which plants generally stop growing) until the middle of the month. As we mentioned in last month’s warm October post, many dahlias, repeating roses, and late flowering perennials are still doing something, and the stalwarts will squeeze out their last, valiant, undersized flowers in this warm start… Continue reading November Forecast Mild at First
Restoring Scottish Montane Flora & Bees for High Altitude Fruit Trees
Montane habitats are at the top of and above the treeline, below the even colder alpine habitats above, where the last wind-blasted trees and shrubs grow. Being high on a mountain may be pleasant, but going up a few tens of metres is like taking giant strides towards the North Pole in terms of the… Continue reading Restoring Scottish Montane Flora & Bees for High Altitude Fruit Trees
Mowing Your Lawn & Autumn Leaves
Autumn leaves on your lawn have to be dealt with, or they will ruin it. Likewise, your lovely stone, brick, and concrete areas will get slippery and require more frequent cleaning if leaves cover them for long. If you have a small garden with some trees around it, it’s likely that you won’t reasonably be… Continue reading Mowing Your Lawn & Autumn Leaves
Flower Bulbs in Winter Hanging Baskets
Long-suffering visitors to this website may remember that we gave selling hanging baskets a whirl a few years ago. We stopped because they turned out to require a lot more work than our meticulous business planning on the back of an old envelope had indicated: c’est la vie. From that experience, we learned that there… Continue reading Flower Bulbs in Winter Hanging Baskets
First Frost Dates Start End of October!
According to the Liverpool Echo, which is naturally Somerset’s favourite weather news source, if you live in Glasgow, you can expect the first frosts from the end of October, only two weeks away. It’s not clear to anyone where that information came from, but it’s in a newspaper from Liverpool, which is good enough for… Continue reading First Frost Dates Start End of October!