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Eric Robson and the team are in Tittensor, Staffordshire. Bunny Guinness, Christine Walkden and Matthew Wilson answer questions from local gardeners.

Eric and the team are in Tittensor, Staffordshire. Bunny Guinness, Christine Walkden and Matthew Wilson answer questions from local gardeners.

The panel help out a questioner afraid to prune her hydrangea, reveal that your amaryllis may not be an amaryllis, and go in search of winter stem colour.

Produced by Dan Cocker
Assistant Producer: Laurence Bassett

A Somethin' Else production for Â鶹ԼÅÄ Radio 4.

Available now

43 minutes

Last on

Sun 26 Feb 2017 14:00

Fact Sheet

Q – I have several pots of snowdrops and this is their third year in pots. Do I need to release them?

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Christine – You can grow snowdrops in pots but every three years take them out, refresh the soil and repot them.Ìý Use loam based soil or John Innes No 2 with grit.Ìý

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Q – My Pieris ‘Forest Flame’ is over twenty-five years old.Ìý It’s now very tall with bare branches lower down.Ìý If I prune it back will it branch out and flower again?

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Bunny – I’ve never cut one back

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Christine – I have and it popped its clogs!

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Bunny – Reduce by half and see how it responds

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Matthew – Just do one or two stems.Ìý Then give it a good liquid feed of sequestered iron to encourage growth.Ìý Mulch with composted bark or peat-free ericaceous compost.

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Q – What height does an Amaryllis normally get to? I’ve had them at seven inches (18cm), eighteen inches (45cm), and the one I have now is 26 inches (66cm) tall.

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Christine – I think what you’re describing is actually a Hippeastrum.Ìý There’s only one species of Amaryllis and that’s the ‘Bella Donna’.Ìý There’s a lot of height variety in the Hippeastrums.

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Q – I want to grow Gladioli.Ìý How deep do they need planting, do they need feeding and do they need lifting in the autumn?

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Christine – Yes basically.Ìý 4-6 inches (10-15cm) deep for the planting.Ìý Incorporate grit into heavier soil.Ìý You’ll need to wait 3-4 years for flowers.

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Matthew – Grow Gladiolus byzantinus and one that used to be a Gladiolus but is now called Acindanthera murielae – they’re my two ‘must haves’.

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Q – Which vegetables shall I put in my wooden trug?Ìý It’s two-and-a-half feet deep. I had deformed carrots last year.

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Christine – Don’t use too much fertiliser or have the soil too compacted.Ìý Treat a trug that size as a raised bed and grow what you like.

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Bunny – Runner beans.ÌýÌý Mergoles was one I grew last year.Ìý Cut-and-come lettuces around the edge. Chinese celery. Parsnips: ‘Countess’, ‘Gladiator, F-1 hybrids.

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Christine – Radishes, pak choi.

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Matthew – Potatoes.

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Q – What can I do about my Hydrangeas?Ìý I don’t want to prune them because last time I did I didn’t get any flowers for the next three years.

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Bunny – Some hydrangeas you can cut right back – Hydrangea arborescens ‘Annabelle’ for example.Ìý ‘Madame Moliere’ too.Ìý Anything else I’d go in now and take a third out.Ìý And do the same again next year.

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Matthew – I’ve got Hydrangea ‘Zorro’ in my garden – I will prune it in about four weeks’ time.Ìý Prune when the buds start to break beneath the deadheads.

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