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Bottom Up

The rise in naturalistic planting schemes and the creation of modern meadows is benefiting biodiversity. There are millions of gardens and gardeners. If we all make small changes to help local biodiversity, this can have a big effect. This is change from the bottom up.

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SeeHow’s Third Birthday and 40th Blog

It is hard to believe that SeeHow is approaching its third birthday and that this text is SeeHow’s 40th Blog – two great milestones! I’m proud to say that during those first 3 years we have had buyers from as far afield as Japan and South Korea, the USA and many EU countries too, particularly Italy and Germany. However, the bulk of sales have been within the UK – we are a nation of gardener lovers after all.

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What did the Romans ever do for us!

Passive Gardening - from simple walled gardens that alter microclimates improving local growing conditions, to the development of glass technology leading to the evolution of greenhouses, palm houses and the biomes of the Eden Project.

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‘No Dig Veg’ – Well Almost!

I’ve been distracted this summer by our new vegetable garden – our first! Our small back garden had been lawn for as long as anyone can remember so the challenge, back in February, was how to turn it into a productive veg patch. We didn’t have grand plans – just growing what we could for the fun of it – the idea being some fresh healthy food from plot-to-plate in just a few minutes.

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Don’t Forget to Look Up

Don’t forget to Look up when you are out-and-about just now. There is something meditative and transformative about wandering slowly beneath blossom-covered cherry trees, stopping occasionally to soak up the beauty. For a few moments, nothing else matters. As a Katsumoto once said, a life devoted to searching for the perfect blossom would not be a wasted life.

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Hedges

Hedges are perhaps the most versatile of all garden art forms - practical windbreaks in seaside gardens; living walls creating garden rooms; weird and wonderful shapes straight from Alice in Wonderland - hedges offer it all.

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Spring Has Sprung

Bright yellow dandelion flowers are everywhere - a sure sign that spring has finally sprung. If you find a perfect seedhead, take a big breath, close your eyes and blow … and while you do, make a wish. It is sure to come true!

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Happy Garden Planning!

A garden never stands still. In some ways it is a bit like a very slow-motion movie. In this movie plants come and go entirely at different times of the year and the scenes dramatically change. There are so many plants to choose from, each offering their own dialogue to the garden ‘movie’. For us gardeners, as the screen-play writers and directors, the exciting challenge is to choose the right plant actors first time around … but how to do this when there are thousands of plants out there?

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Nothing says, “I love you”, like flowers

It is true – nothing says ‘I love you’ like the gift of flowers and for many of us, this is our first choice for Mother’s Day. In the USA Mother’s Day is normally the second Sunday in May. In Poland it is on 26 May this year. But in the UK, Mother’s Day is on Sunday 19 March.

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Winter Joy

I recently visited Cambo Gardens in Fife, which holds an annual Snowdrop Festival and is home to the Plant Heritage national collection, with over 200 varieties. It is one of my favourite gardens with its own very unusual ‘sense-of-place’ … where nature and the manmade elements co-exist in harmony – maybe nature even has the upper-hand … here-and-there!

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Valentine’s Day

SeeHow is the perfect Valentine’s Day gift! But really, it is more than just a ‘gift of flowers’ – it is a promise of year-round garden colour. SeeHow works visually, showing the whole lives of 140 plants – January through to December. Anyone can use it – from complete beginners to gardening professionals. A picture really is worth 1,000 words! For easy searching, the plants are arranged in a colour library - white, pink, red, purple, blue, green, yellow and orange. But the user can re-arranged them any way they like. And there is a Plant Index too!

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Busy Old Fool, Unruly Sun …

Dungeness Headland – a vast bank of flint shingle on the Kent coast, covering over 20 square kilometres, reaching out 3k into the English Channel towards France. Surprisingly, for what can appear at first glance to be a shingle desert – perhaps even an industrial wasteland – it is one of the most environmentally diverse places in the UK.

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