Emma Doughty
city London
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peas
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Emma Doughty
city London
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Best in show: Irish dahlia growers compete in the UK - irishtimes.com - Britain - Ireland
irishtimes.com
09.09.2023 / 05:37

Best in show: Irish dahlia growers compete in the UK

When not in flower, it’s fair to say dahlia plants rarely command a second glance. In fact, to the uninitiated, they could be easily mistaken for potatoes, not that surprising when you consider that these two fast-growing, frost-tender tuberous species share a surprising amount of common ground regarding their geographical range in the wild and their fondness for a certain set of growing conditions that includes a rich, moist but free-draining soil in full sun or light shade. But the comparison ends there. Unlike potatoes, which are valued solely as a tasty food crop, dahlias are generally prized for the otherworldly beauty of their often large and vividly colourful flowers.

Your gardening questions answered: should I feed the birds? - irishtimes.com - Ireland
irishtimes.com
02.09.2023 / 05:21

Your gardening questions answered: should I feed the birds?

Could you please help to settle an argument between my friend and I about whether it’s a good idea to feed garden birds? My friend is of the opinion that they’ll survive just fine without our help, and that feeding them only increases the risk of spreading disease. RS, Dublin

The Peat-Free Diet: Epilogue and Acknowledgements - theunconventionalgardener.com
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 12:03

The Peat-Free Diet: Epilogue and Acknowledgements

When I set about blogging The Peat-Free Diet it was an experiment, an journey into the unknown. My aim was to provide gardeners who want to garden without the use of peat with the information they need to do so, and the book evolved into a gardening primer that assumed peat was not on the menu. My love of science made more of an appearance than I had anticipated and there are plenty of big words to cope with, but it is my hope that they are presented in such a way that they are not hard to swallow.

On the Shelf: Nature’s Wild Harvest - theunconventionalgardener.com - Britain
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 12:03

On the Shelf: Nature’s Wild Harvest

Every month this year I’ve been trying to read one of the unread books on my shelf, and to then decide whether it gets to keep its spot or needs to be set free to find a new home. For June I chose Nature’s Wild Harvest by Eric Soothill and Michael J. Thomas. It was published in 1983, and has been sitting on my bookshelf for three years, since I bought it in our local secondhand bookshop (which only opens on Wednesdays).

Dear diary: another day in the life on Mars - theunconventionalgardener.com - Britain - France - India - Russia - Japan - Australia - San Francisco - state Utah
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 12:02

Dear diary: another day in the life on Mars

Header image: Suited up to simulate the conditions of working outside on Mars. Jonathan Clarke (the author, left) with visiting engineer Michael Curtis-Rouse, from UK Space Agency (right). Jonathan Clarke personal collection, Author provided.

The Hive: no. 1 - theunconventionalgardener.com - Sweden - city London
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 12:02

The Hive: no. 1

Earth Day seems to be an auspicious day on which to being a new blog series. ‘The Hive’ is going to be a collection of positive news stories about the environment, with a solarpunk vibe – demonstrating that those of us who care about the environment are not alone, and that in fact there are legions of people around the world who are actively making a difference, and who share a positive vision of how the future could look, rather than the gloom and doom of a dystopia forced on us by a broken climate.

The Peat-Free Diet: Germination and dormancy - theunconventionalgardener.com
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 12:02

The Peat-Free Diet: Germination and dormancy

Sowing seeds is often the first gardening task of the year, and a favoured way of propagating plants because it’s very cost-effective. It’s the first stage in many plants’ lives and seeds want to grow, it’s their reason for being. And yet some gardeners are intimidated by seed sowing and avoid it where possible and others struggle to grow plants from seed successfully in peat-free compost. So I’m going to begin The Peat-Free Diet with a look at what happens when we sow seeds, the best way to go about it, and how to achieve a good success rate.

The Millennium Seed Bank – arrivals - theunconventionalgardener.com - Britain - city London - county Sussex
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 12:01

The Millennium Seed Bank – arrivals

It’s nearly two years since I started the Alternative Kitchen Garden Seed Appeal, with the aim of raising enough money to help the Millennium Seed Bank save a species. We still have a way to go to reach the target ;(

The Peat-Free Diet: Preface - theunconventionalgardener.com - Britain - Poland
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 11:57

The Peat-Free Diet: Preface

The idea that we should be gardening without using peat is not a new one, at least here in the UK. I have a copy of ‘Gardening Without Peat’, published by Friends of the Earth in 1991. It explains that our exploitation of peat bogs is using up peat faster than it is being formed – we should consider it a non-renewable resource. The destruction of the peat bogs is causing a decline in biodiversity and allowing carbon dioxide to escape into the atmosphere to add to our climate woes.

Off the Shelf: The Gardener’s Year - theunconventionalgardener.com
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 11:54

Off the Shelf: The Gardener’s Year

As I said, one of my aims for this year is to streamline my gardening library a little bit – not a drastic chopping back, just a little light pruning to keep the shape

Off the Shelf: Salad Plants for Your Garden - theunconventionalgardener.com
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 11:53

Off the Shelf: Salad Plants for Your Garden

Continuing with my goal of reading one of the unread gardening books on my shelf every month this year, I choose Salad Plants for Your Garden by Roger Phillips and Martyn Rix as my book for May. It has been in my possession for two years since I bought it in a charity shop; it was originally published in 1998.

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