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Your Recent Questions and Answers.

Q.    MOCK ORANGE. How can I get my mock orange to bloom? I planted it about 10 years ago and rarely see any blossoms.

A.     Mock orange. Mock orange loves the sunshine the double one even more so, also mock orange love poor soil conditions. Too much feed encourages leaf growth not flowers. If your plant is in a dark corner it will also be very reluctant to flower. Cut out the old growth and dead canes to let in the light. Here at the nursery we have a forty year old specimen, exposed to the sun all day, which is always loaded with flowers.

Q.     I have a very old and very large Cyclamen. As usual in the spring I placed the plant outside for the summer. I recently brought the very healthy looking plant back indoors, but now to my despair all the leaves and flower buds are now hanging down over the sides of the pot. What is the reason for this, is it something that I have done?

A.     The most likely culprit is the Vine Weevil. This is an evil little beetle whose larvae love to eat the roots of the vine hence the name. However they also just love cyclamen roots and your plant out in the garden would have been heaven-sent. There are sprays applied in summer to deter the beetle, but to cure the problem now you must remove the plant from its pot. Then wash all the soil from the roots and you will find a host of small white maggots. Remove and kill all theses maggots, making sure that none remain hidden amongst the roots. After this re-pot your plant in fresh compost and look forward to an abundant display of flowers.

Vine Weevil are a pest throughout the garden but are at their worst in pots, containers, etc. The presence of the adult beetle is often indicated by crescent shaped bites taken out of the plant's leaves. A few garlic plants amongst your favourite plants will help deter the weevil.

Q.     I am planning a new flowerbed that is in an area of the yard that is very waterlogged. Other then digging some form of a ditch along the back edge what will I need to do with the soil?

A.     First check your drains to see if blocked, failing that, I would suggest that you planted marginal or bog plants, which live on the water edge. There are some lovely flowering examples available. Ask at your plant centre. Valecroft.

Q.     I am about to replant a hedge with Leylandii conifers, I note that there are green and golden varieties which is the best?

A.     Firstly, if you want to avoid future trouble don't plant Leylandii. With their rapid growth to great heights they are the curse of modern gardening. Here at the nursery we refuse to sell them, have done for the past 20 years. However if you must plant them, both are about the same. But if you plant the golden, to keep the gold colour you must feed with hydrated lime every so often.


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Q.     I have a lot of small potatoes left in a 25Kilo bag that I bought in a supermarket a little while ago. They have some shoots on them. Can I plant these potatoes in the garden?

A.     It is almost certain that these potatoes have been sprayed with a shoot retardent while in storage on the farm, the tubers are slow to recover from the effects of the spray, so it is doubtful if you would get much return for your effort.

Q.     I am a keen gardener but I live a long way from London. The question is this, is the Chelsea Flower Show worth the effort of visiting?

A.     If there is one event you must go to in your gardening life it is Chelsea. The exhibition gardens are larger than life as are the designers, but from all the grand schemes you can usually see an idea that will just suit your own garden. As well as British visitors, the air is alive with voices speaking many other languages, all gathered together in a common garden cause.

Also one can see, and order, all the latest plants at Chelsea, long before the Garden Centres get a look in. All in all definitely worth a visit, even if you can only manage once.


Q.     Hi, hopefully you can help me, about 2 weeks ago my mother was badly stung by a bee and ended up in hospital after nearly dying due to a severe reaction to the sting. This weekend we had to dig up most of the plants due to them being bee-loving plants and gave them to the neighbours to enjoy.

Can you suggest any plants that don't attract bees or wasps or any other helpful suggestions would be greatly appreciated? Glyn.

A.     First sorry to hear about your mother, I hope she is on the road to recovery. All plants have flowers to attract insects for pollination. My suggestion is to plant a winter flowering garden, these plants will flower after bees and wasps have ceased activity.

Winter Jasmine; Chinese witch-hazel; Camellia; Daphne mezereum; Clematis cirrosa; dwarf Rhododendron; Vibernum tinus; Corkscrew hazel.

There are many winter flowering bulbs, winter heather's, winter pansies, and various winter flowering herbaceous plants. Most of the above have leaves through the summer.


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Q.     I have a large Skimmia in my garden that I wish to prune hard back. Can I safely cut it back to within 6 inches of the ground, and if so, when is the best time to do it? Andy.

A.     If you want winter flowers on your Skimmia, spring is the time to prune. As to how much, the more you remove the longer it will take for the plant to recover. Personally, I think cutting down to 6 inches is a bit drastic; leaving one third would be more suitable.

Q.    I have some Raspberry canes in my garden which start well enough in the spring, but as the fruit grows the leaves go yellow and the fruit stays small. I have tried feeding them but to no avail.

A.    This sounds like poor drainage or waterlogged heavy clay, try to see if you can improve the drainage. Raspberries really like light sandy slightly acid soil and mixing in some gritty sand will help. The yellowing leaves can also be caused by lack of what are called trace elements in the soil. Theses are essential to plant health and under certain conditions the plants are unable to access any, there are various products on the market to correct this deficiency.

Believe it or not a liberal dosing with 'Epsom Salts' will unlock the trace elements in the soil and restore plant health. These can be obtained in bulk packs from certain chemists, just tell them what you want them for.

Q.    My geraniums always suffer from scale insects what are they and how do I cope?

A.    Scale insects are small parasites that attach themselves to the underside of the leaf and plumb themselves directly into the veins of the plant; they are a serious pest. Young insects are easy to dislodge but once established they grow an ugly light yellow protective scale which slowly destroys the leaf.

There are various biological controls and spraying works on the juveniles but the real answer is plant hygiene. If you keep your geraniums over winter always destroy infected plants before storage and if buying in plants in the spring always check for infestation. Avoid infected plants like the plague.

Q.     What are F1 Hybrid Plants and are they worth the extra money?

A.    An F1 Hybrid is the result of a cross between two desirable parent plants. The plants are pollinated by hand in controlled, isolated, conditions. The resultant plant is superior to its parents but the downside is that the costs of production are high. Also the seeds produced from F1 Hybrid plants produce a plant totally inferior to the F1 parent. Today many F1 plants, on sale at the Garden Centres as young plants, are produced by tissue culture, rather than being produced from seed. This also is an expensive process.

Are they worth the extra cost? The answer is most definitly yes. The superior performance of the plant more than compensates for the extra cost.

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Some gardening books worth reading.

  • The Eden Project. by Tim Smith.
  • Propagating Plants. by The Royal Horticultural Society.
  • Ground Force Winter Garden Workbook. by Charlie Dimmock.
  • The Rock and Water Garden Expert. by D. C. Hessayon.
  • Place that Plant. by Frances Welland.

The aims of this web site.

  1. To help the novice gardener.
  2. To share my knowledge and experience with the beginner.
  3. To try to solve your gardening problems on the answers pages.
  4. To promote gardening, the ultimate therapy.

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    In spring the greatest factor contributing to the loss of freshly planted plants is lack of water.
The roots of freshly planted stock take a while to attach themselves to the soil. Until this happens the plant is vulnerable.




    Always water your newly planted bedding and container grown shrubs etc in the evening. If you water in the heat of the day the water simply goes straight through the plant and evaporates. Water in the evening and the water is stored in the plant and used for growth.








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