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Celebrate Valentine's Day With Bleeding Hearts
Dicentra and Lamprocapnos light up dappled shady areas with their heart-shaped flowers in pink, white and romantic red. Little wonder Val Bourne loves them
Make A Start With Chilli Peppers
Whether you’re a chilli addict or prefer the milder taste of sweet peppers, there’s a capsicum variety to suit all needs – and now is the time to get sowing, says Kris Collins
Choose Your Favourite Snowdrops
Dispel the winter gloom with beautiful snowdrops, says Hazel Sillver. Now’s the time to order them ‘in the green’.
Create Some Instant Winter Colour
If the garden is looking bare and bland, there are plenty of quick-fix ways to brighten the late winter scene, says Hazel Sillver
It Wouldn't Be Winter Without Clematis Cirrhosa
Blessed with an abundance of pretty, often fragrant bell flowers, it’s amazing that theevergreen fern-leaved winter clematis isn’t more widely grown
Keep Old Jack Frost At Bay
There are smart ways to protect your crop says Toby
Lovely Liriope!
For reliable, attractive ground cover, no gardener should be without this superb autumnal performer and great weed-smotherer, says Rob Keenan
What To Team With Tulips
Want a new take on tulips? Bring these beautiful bulbs to life by combining them with complementary plants, says Hazel Sillver
How To Train And Tame Wisteria
Don’t be wary of wisteria, by choosing the right varieties and pruning regularly you can enjoy this quintessential climber without fearing a takeover bid, says Graham Rice
A Palace Alive With Wildlife!
Some parts of London have more variety than we have in the counrtyside says Val.
Treacherous March Weather
Don’t be fooled into believing spring is here, warns Peter
Smarter Weeding
Different weeds need different approaches, says Bob
Pots Of Colour At Easter
Add colour and drama to your container displays this Easter using bulbs, shrubs, alpines and annuals. Tamsin Westhorpe has some quick and easy ideas
Hardy Annuals For Every Garden
Tough, floriferous and inexpensive, these garden heroes are the best way to bulk up borders and ring the changes each year, says Graham Rice
Cover Your Tracks!
After leaving tyre tracks on the Earl of Devon’s lawn, Toby springs into action with a rapid repair
The Conifer Garden
Steve and Jane Cleverdon’s richly textured garden in Somerset is a haven of conifers, says Sue Bradley
Give Houseplants A Boost
Before you show your weary houseplants the door, Tamsin Westhorpe offers advice that will give lacklustre indoor species a new lease of life
Sorting Out A Cold Frame
Don’t neglect hardy cuttings and seedlings, says Ruth
Top Of The Trees
If you want to attract wildlife and cross-pollinate the apple trees in your garden, plant a crab apple, says Val
Cool For Cats
Love or hate them, cats can be good for a garden, says Bob
Dear Father Christmas...
No novelty ornaments as presents, please, says Toby
Creating An Instant Garden
Tamsin Westhorpe has some on-the-spot ideas for anyone renting or simply wanting quick results.
More Bloom For Your Buck With Repeat-Flowering Plants
Why have a single flush of flowers when you can have two, three or even more? Tamsin Hope Thomson looks at plants that will work double duty in the garden next year.
Rhapsody In Blue
Blue is the colour if you want your plants to pull in the bees, says Val.
Heavenly Scent Christmas Evergreens
Holly and ivy are long-time festive favourites, says Bob.
A Leaf Out Of Toby's Book
There’s more to leaves than meets the eye says Toby
A Dynamic Situation
We can all do our bit to care for our insect life says Val.
Best Winter Plants For Kitchen-Window Appeal
In the depths of winter, when you can’t always get outside, you need shrubs whose flowers and foliage can be admired from afar, says Graham Rice.
Our Pick Of 2018's Best New Fruit Bushes
Love berries but short on space? Winter is ideal for planting soft fruit, and the latest new varieties were created with small gardens in mind, says Kris Collins
Ornamental Grasses
With plenty of movement, colour, shape and texture, grasses really come into their own in autumn. But forget the big boys, there are varieties that are perfect for the most petite of plots.