In the Garden

Solve a problem, find a plant or look for a design inspiration


Pruning a Sasanqua with Don and Dave

Pruning a Sasanqua with Don and Dave About 21 months ago Don showed how simple it is to buy an ordinary sasanqua camellia from a nursery and in just a few minutes turn it into a beautiful ball on a stick or topiary. The two camellia standards that were created almost...

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Pruning Grevilleas

Pruning Grevilleas Grevilleas are by far the most popular Australian native plants grown in gardens today. They attract native birds to the garden and many of them flower for most of the year. The only problem is that after five to six years some grevilleas start to...

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Hollows in Trees

Trees are great survivors; some can live for hundreds to thousands of years. Don looked at two magnificent old gums in his garden, which to the casual observer look half dead and ready for the chop. Both are centuries old and even though they have hollows and parts of...

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Clipped Ivy

Some very common plants or ‘garden workhorses’ can look special when clipped and pruned into interesting shapes. A good example is Hedera canariensis, a species of ivy native to Tunisia and Algeria. Plant details Common name: Canary Island ivy Botanic...

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Come and Save My Garden – Lesmurdie

Jenny McCann lives in Lesmurdie, Western Australia, with her husband, Eliot, and baby, Davis. They do have a garden – somewhere under a jungle of morning glory (Ipomoea indica). Jenny recently sat down and wrote a letter to Burke’s Backyard urgently...

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Composting Leaves

Composting Leaves In the autumn the leaves on deciduous trees and shrubs turn fabulous shades of gold, scarlet, crimson, orange and purple. However, when the spectacular display is over the leaves fall and can be very messy. Some people burn the leaves or put them in...

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Deep Watering

Watering the garden is a much more complex job than many people think. It is particularly difficult if your soil is water repellent (or hydrophobic), because the water just runs off instead of soaking into the soil. These soils can be treated with a soil wetting agent...

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Dying Citrus

Don explained why the orange tree (Citrus sinensis) shown in our segment was dying. It was struggling to survive in a damp, shady position, in heavy clay soil, with competition from the surrounding lawn. Don advised the garden owners not to try and save the orange...

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Evergreen Alders – Come And Save My Garden

Don’s first impression of this garden was that it looked ‘messy’. The owner, Wendy Coppock, had placed potted plants of all shapes and sizes outside the back door to screen the clothes line from view. A white cubby house for the kids had been plonked...

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Fertilisers

Fertilisers Plants produce most of their annual growth over the next few weeks, so it is important to fertilise them now. Lawns: use a complete lawn food, an organic food such as Dynamic Lifter formulated for lawns, or a slow-release lawn fertiliser such as Scotts...

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