CATEGORIES
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OUR PLOTTER OF THE MONTH
Last year we launched a competition to find 12 readers and their plots that would appear in Kitchen Garden magazine this year.Our latest winner makes the most of her back garden
Green manures
Steve and Val Bradley outline the benefits and challenges of using green manures
Top Ten Berberis
With colourful foliage and prolific flowers, there's a berberis that will suit almost any garden situation
Understanding peat-free
What is peat-free compost and how should we use it? Victoria Wright, of Melcourt Industries, looks at the introduction of peat-free compost and its various components
Mite fever...
Bob explains how you can protect your greenhouse crops in hot weather if they fall prey to red spider mites
ROOTING FOR carrots
KG editor Steve Ott takes a look at one of our most popular root veg and offers his top tips for great harvests
It's a busy bank holiday
IT is the final bank holiday until August and our gardens are in their growing prime, so let’s get out there and make the most of it!
Create a butterfly garden
Nurturing these delicate winged insects will benefit the environment as well as bringing the garden to life
Redefining SUSTAINABILITY
Becky Searle heads up to Cumbria to talk to the couple behind Dalefoot Composts, a company that specialises in peat-free compost, using potash-rich bracken from local farms
GROW YOUR OWN BERRY BOWL
Enjoy the fruits of your labour - literally - says Rob Smith, with home-grown berries. He also highlights some special varieties
CHOW TO BEAT POTATO BLIGHT
Anton Rosenfeld from Garden Organic shares toolkit for tackling blight his troubleshooting
The town dweller's guide to Cottage gardens
A cottage garden without the cottage? Why not, says Martyn Cox, especially as many of the plants and techniques will work just as well in an urban setting
COMBAT APHIDS NATURALLY
This month garden writer and blogger Emily Cupit turns her attention to that sap-sucking menace, the aphid, and offers some eco-friendly ways to control them
TO PINCH OR NOT To PINCH?
Sometimes plants benefit from having their growing tips removed, as Becky Searle explains
Botanical bumbershoots
For a natural high, every garden should feature living parasols, says Toby, as he praises the humble umbel
Planting out seedlings
They’re hardened off, ready to go and grow
Managing molluscs
This is an exciting time for crops, and for rampaging slugs and snails. Bob shows you how to keep things in check
It's all go in the greenhouse
Undercover growing is going at full tilt now
Ups and downs
Erratic weather has its good and bad points
Everlasting Dahlias
Graham Rice reveals his selection of pompon dahlias, plus small and miniature ball and cactus dahlias, that easily fit in with other flowers and are particularly long flowering
Bringing you the sunshine
Colourful sunflowers provide cheery height
Cut back for more flowers
The Chelsea chop will help some perennials
Be inspired and Plant a winner!
Chelsea’s Plant of the Year competition recognises reliability as well as innovation, and provides some of the best options for our gardens
How to deal with diseases
Nip them in the bud before they spread
Top Ten Lilacs
In recent years, traditional lilacs have been joined by many new varieties and there are so many good ones,
Plant mutations
Steve and Val Bradley explain how many of the varieties we regard as ‘normal’, particularly variegated plants, actually started as a mutation or sport
'Tis the season for containers
Celebrate baskets of colour and patio pots
High and mighty
Selecting climbers for your garden might feel like a tall order sometimes, but it’s well within your reach
Hardy annuals, biennials and veg
Alan Toogood explains how to raise hardy annuals from seed sown in spring or autumn, hardy biennials that take two years to grow to mature, and easily grown vegetables
Ask JOHN NEGUS
John will reply personally to all your gardening questions