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Latest Gardening News
Although it's time to take things easier in the garden, the RHS Advisory Service is still receiving plenty of weather-related enquiries. Here are the most popular.
Francine Raymond surveys the seed catalogues that have been ignored until now to p[lan which veggies and flowers she will grow during 2011.
I have so much to do this year - at Chelsea and at home - that it's hard to know where to start.
I recently came back from nearly three weeks driving 3,200 miles to Bratislava and back, visiting gardens, parks, nurseries and universities en route.
High in the Welsh mountains, Antony Woodward discovered proper weather - and a perfect fantasy garden.
Francine Raymond says goodbye to the home her family have lived in and the garden she and her late husband lovingly created.
Plant-rich, wildlife-friendly and beautiful - no one does a cottage garden like Carol Klein, the life force of TV gardening.
Ian Douglas has a disappointing new year but looks forward to spring.
Video diary: designer Cleve West visits stonemasons at Cheltenham, in arctic conditions, to find reclaimed flagstones for his 2011 garden.
Help is at hand to combat the Christmas bulge with the National Trust’s top calorie-busting walks, which are taking place throughout January
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Choose from our collection of discounted plants and favourite flowers at the Telegraph Garden Shop
The top 10 flowers you can plant now for festive blooms inside and out for the Christmas season.
Pigs in the city? Goats in the suburbs? Alex Mitchell talks to today's 'Tom and Barbaras'.
Fruit and Vegetables
Help is at hand to combat the Christmas bulge with the National Trust’s top calorie-busting walks, which are taking place throughout January
The term permaculture, coined in Australia by Bill Mollison, is a hybrid of "permanent agriculture" and is described by him as a "specific design system for sustainable living".
Helen Yemm's advice for those wanting to use left over mistletoe berries to grow the plant.
Do you grow as much winter veg as you could? Growing fabulous rows of a wide choice of feisty vegetables stops the garden becoming just a window landscape and gives it real purpose.
Garden Projects
John Brookes returns to the Chicago Botanic Garden to help its head gardener tweak the English Walled Garden he designed and planted 20 years ago.
GARDENING EQUIPMENT
Gardeners can never have enough gloves. Jean Vernon looks at various options available in the market.
PLANTS
I love catkins at this time of year: they seem to snuggle tight into the branches while they wait for the lengthening days of early spring. Only then do they really stretch out, limber up and dance.
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