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70th Anniversary Garden Party at Ness Botanic Gardens: Part One

Eric Robson hosts a special edition from Ness Botanic Gardens, where GQT held its 70th birthday garden party. With Matt Biggs, Anne Swithinbank, Matthew Wilson and Roy Lancaster.

Eric Robson hosts a very special edition from Ness Botanic Gardens, where GQT held its 70th birthday garden party. On the anniversary panel with Eric are Matt Biggs, Anne Swithinbank, Matthew Wilson - alongside returning panellist and special guest Roy Lancaster.

The panel answers questions from a lively audience of 1000 gardeners, offering tips on getting rid of Himalayan Balsam, advising on being patient with a satsuma, and suggesting the best tea varieties to grow in the UK.

Also, Rosie Yeomans takes a tour of the garden party, chatting with expert and amateur gardeners alike and paying a visit to the Â鶹ԼÅÄ Talks Stage along her way.

Produced by Dan Cocker
Assistant Producer: Laurence Bassett

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

Available now

43 minutes

Fact Sheet

Q – Has the world found a way to kill Himalayan Balsam (Impatiens glandulifera)?

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Matthew – The only way to get rid of it is to go on mass weeding sessions and pull as much out as possible.

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Anne – You need to cover your soil because it is an annual. Establish a really good ground cover.

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Matt – I grow Impatiens tinctoria which is not so pervasive. They grow to 5ft tall (1.5m) and the flowers are white.

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Q – Should I be more tidy and clear up snippings from garden?

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Roy – I compost them or put them in the green bin.

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Matthew – It is fine as long as the cuttings are not diseased.

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Anne – I can only see a problem if you chopped up and left a plant that had an allelopathic effect.

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Q – I have been asked to grow tulips for table decorations for a wedding next year, what are your suggestions for purple and pale lilac?

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Matthew – Plant some now and wait to plant others for 6 weeks and then leave another set until just before Christmas. I would put some in pots too. For royal purple I would recommend ‘Jan Rues’.

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Matt – I would also plant them in different locations around the garden.

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Q – 12 years ago I sewed some Satsuma pips, when can I expect them to bear fruits?

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Anne – This is typical from citrus raised from pips. I would switch from seaweed fertilizer to a citrus fertilizer, which is higher in potash. I would keep them in a cool room inside the house so they are warmer over winter and they will go less dormant.

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Rosie Yeoman’s feature:

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Matthew Wilson: Eupatorium (Bonesets) and Rudbeckia subtomentosaÌý(Little Henry), Helianthus (Lemon Queen).

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Q – I’d like to grow my own tea.Ìý What is the best variety for the north west?

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Anne – Camellia sinensis is the most popular in the UK.Ìý

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Matt – I wouldn’t recommend it for sandy soil. It will need acidic soil or compost in a pot.Ìý It needs to be protected from the frost.Ìý

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Q – I once heard that you can put anything that ever lived into compost.Ìý What do the panel think?

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Anne – Technically you could.Ìý I don’t put cooked food in.Ìý I just use vegetable waste.

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Matt – My mum used to put all sorts in – woolens, cotton shirts, underpants!Ìý

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Q – Do any of the panel believe that caressing plants encourages growth?

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Matthew – I wouldn’t want to caress a Colletia paradoxa which has some fearsome thorns.Ìý But I do like to caress my grasses; particularly Pennisetums like ‘Red Head’ and viridescuns and ‘Hameln’.Ìý I would be wary of a cactus too.

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Anne – I used to play the spines on my cacti!Ìý There is a benefit for seedlings – you can toughen them up by brushing them and mimicking the wind

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