Mary Ellen Ellis
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Mary Ellen Ellis
Britain
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Great Garden Escapes: North Norfolk - theenglishgarden.co.uk - Britain - Netherlands
theenglishgarden.co.uk
24.08.2023 / 13:03

Great Garden Escapes: North Norfolk

Herein in lies part of its charm. Tiny coastal villages, lazy rivers, reed beds and their narrow, watery channels, sandy beaches and the wide horizons for which the region is renowned make this a place of glorious escape. The region is studded with gardens to visit, too, be they aristocratic estates or smaller country houses.

Eco Garden: Recycling Plastic Bottles - theunconventionalgardener.com - Britain
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 12:03

Eco Garden: Recycling Plastic Bottles

Plastic bottles are everywhere these days, even floating around in the oceans. Fortunately for the environment, recycling facilities are improving (here in the UK at least) but a lot of plastic bottles still end up in landfill, where they just don’t break down. If you would like to give your plastic bottles a new lease of life once they’re empty, and save money too, then try recycling them into something useful for the garden.

Eco Garden: Grow Your Own Tea Pot - theunconventionalgardener.com - Britain
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 12:01

Eco Garden: Grow Your Own Tea Pot

There’s nothing quite as British as a nice cup of tea, and sitting down for a good cuppa can certainly brighten up your day. A tea bush is unlikely to thrive in most UK gardens (although there are a couple of tea plantations) because of the climate, but there are plenty of herbs that are easy to grow and make a refreshing brew. They’ll even grow well in containers – so they make ideal plants for a windowbox or a patio. Having them close at hand means you can harvest leaves as and when you need them.

Eco Garden: Allotment Chic - theunconventionalgardener.com - Britain
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 11:59

Eco Garden: Allotment Chic

Allotments are going to be all the rage this year. The National Trust recently announced that they’re making available enough spare land for up to 1000 allotments, via the Landshare scheme. British Waterways and British Rail are in on the act, too, looking for land along canals and railway lines that could be used to grow vegetables.

Eco Garden: Worm Composting - theunconventionalgardener.com - Britain
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 11:59

Eco Garden: Worm Composting

If you’ve got a small garden then you might find it difficult to find space for a conventional compost heap. A possible solution is a worm compost bin, which takes up far less space because an army of worms does most of the composting work.

Two great books from Timber Press - theunconventionalgardener.com - Usa - China - Britain - county Garden
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 11:56

Two great books from Timber Press

With my bookshelf groaning under the weight of unread review books, I have declared an emergency Reading Week. Reading Week at university is a bit like half term – the lecturers get a week off teaching, and the students are supposed to use it to catch up on their reading list. When I went back to uni to do my Masters I dreamed of spending a lot of time reading, with the wealth of the university library on hand. The reality was there was never any time to ready anything that wasn’t immediately essay-related, which was a shame.

Book review: The Secret Lives of Garden Bees - theunconventionalgardener.com - Britain
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 11:54

Book review: The Secret Lives of Garden Bees

If there is one thing I am truly grateful for during this extraordinary time, it’s my garden. Not only is it producing harvests for us and reducing our reliance on our over-stressed food system, but it’s somewhere we can step outside and be surrounded by nature, without having to worry about social distancing. 

British Asian Gardens - theunconventionalgardener.com - Britain - India - city London - county Garden
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 11:53

British Asian Gardens

I don’t generally watch Gardeners’ World these days, but two weeks ago they broadcast a special edition (episode 20 in this year’s series) as part of the BBC’s Big British Asian Summer, exploring South Asian influences on British gardens. Monty Don ‘hosted’ the show from the stunning gardens of Europe’s first traditional Hindu temple, BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir in London. The stonework for the temple itself was all carved in India, then brought to London to be assembled. Flowers, particularly the sacred lotus, are represented throughout the decorative motifs. Mountains of flowers are used in the temple’s religious ceremonies, and I was intrigued to learn that – in India – there are businesses based around recycling temple flowers into products such as incense sticks, soaps, and eco-packaging, to reduce their environmental impact. At the London temple, the gardens are a fusion of a European parterre-style design, with Indian motifs, colourful flowers, and a delightful lack of symmetry.

Book Review: How to Make a Garden Grow (Heath Robinson) - theunconventionalgardener.com - Britain
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 11:53

Book Review: How to Make a Garden Grow (Heath Robinson)

I grew up understanding the phrase “a bit Heath Robinson” as meaning something that had been cobbled together, but I wasn’t really aware of the fact that Heath Robinson was a real person. Born in 1872, he was an English cartoonist and illustrator, and he became famous for drawings of convoluted contraptions – ridiculously complicated machines that achieved things you don’t need a machine for. It was in this capacity that ‘Heath Robinson’ entered the dictionary in 1912; he became more synonymous with cobbling things together during the ‘Make Do and Mend’ campaign of the Second World War. In fact, one of the automated analysis machines at Bletchley Park – a forerunner of the codebreaking Colossus – was named Heath Robinson in his honour.

How to Watch the Artemis 1 Launch from the UK - theunconventionalgardener.com - Britain
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 11:38

How to Watch the Artemis 1 Launch from the UK

For those of us in the UK who can’t attend the launch of NASA’s Artemis I mission in person, the easiest way for us to watch it is via NASA’s YouTube channel.

Brian Minter: Bay laurel is one of the most underused varieties in our gardens today. And here's why - theprovince.com - Britain - Germany - Netherlands - Italy
theprovince.com
15.08.2023 / 16:15

Brian Minter: Bay laurel is one of the most underused varieties in our gardens today. And here's why

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