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About The Edible Gardening Project – Botanics Stories
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RBGE Personal and Project Stories. About The Edible Gardening Project. The Edible Gardening Project is based at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh and teaches people the skills and knowledge they need to grow their own food. Supported by the players of People’s Postcode Lottery. The project is for those who are keen to grow their own food but don’t know where to begin. For information on events go to the Edible Gardening what’s on page. Posted by Root Admin. March 19, 2013 at 12:47 pm. If you have any co...
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Weekly Highlights – Botanics Stories
http://stories.rbge.org.uk/archives/tag/weekly-highlights+august
RBGE Personal and Project Stories. Plant of the month. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. Plant of the month. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. The good sized stems on this. Tagged with: Allium wallichii. Plant of the month. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. Heads up for Hydrangeas. Producing flower heads of dinner plate size in the copse is a young specimen of. RBGE Living Collections Accession Factsheet. Wilson, Ernest Henry. Hubei, W:Hsing-shan Hsien. See full details in the Herbarium Catalogue. A fine growi...
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Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh - Sitemap
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Sign up for e-news. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. Terms and Conditions Of Sale. Sign up for e-news. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. RBGE Living Plant Collection Policy. Join as a Friend. Join as a Patron. Celebrate Life Commemorative Programme. Remember RBGE in Your Will. Horticulture, botany and environment. Arts, photography and wellbeing. The Edible Gardening Project. Science News @RBGE Science. Cryptogamic plants and fungi. Plants and climate change. Scientific and Technical Services.
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Weekly Highlights – Botanics Stories
http://stories.rbge.org.uk/archives/tag/weekly-highlights+march
RBGE Personal and Project Stories. Seen in pots in the traditional alpine house and colonising the tufa wall in the modern structure too. Also worth a mention is. Flowering for the first time in the tufa. Once the roots are established in the planting pockets flowering should be assured. Plant of the month. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. Keep your eye on the alpine display. Erythronium grandiflorum ssp. grandiflorum. Erythronium grandiflorum ssp. grandiflorum. Plant of the month. Winter debris on a lawn.
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Weekly Highlights – Botanics Stories
http://stories.rbge.org.uk/archives/tag/weekly-highlights+april
RBGE Personal and Project Stories. Look inside the open flower of. Aurora’ at the base of each of the six petals is a perfect white circle that magnifies the nectar pool. A botanical feature to attract pollinating insects deep into the cup of petals thus brushing against the pollen laden anthers to disseminate to the next flower. Plant of the month. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. There was a double take when looking up from the new growth of. Plant of the month. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. Collected...
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Weekly Highlights – Botanics Stories
http://stories.rbge.org.uk/archives/tag/weekly-highlights+september
RBGE Personal and Project Stories. Weigela coraeensis var. fragrans. During the first growing season a newly planted shrub will establish; needing light, water and nutrient. Subsequent seasons will see good growth and the plant thriving. This newly planted. Weigela coraeensis var. fragrans. Tagged with: Plant of the month. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. Weigela coraeensis var. fragrans. Two South American Labiates that are set to brighten the borders for autumn are the sturdy and felty. Vaccinium arctos...
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Weekly Highlights – Botanics Stories
http://stories.rbge.org.uk/archives/tag/weekly-highlights+june
RBGE Personal and Project Stories. Weigela decora collected in Japan from an area of dense mixed forest containing Cryptomeria japonica and Stachyurus praecox, these were huge parent plants spreading and reaching 4m x 4m. Here a huge bulk of deciduous woody shoots and twigs forming, an ideal ecological habitat for woodland life. Flowering just now, the peduncles opening a creamy yellow then the pinks and red shades start to appear, giving an unusual floral display. Plant of the month. To perfection. ...
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Garden Wildlife – Botanics Stories
http://stories.rbge.org.uk/archives/category/garden-wildlife
RBGE Personal and Project Stories. October 2016 Garden Wildlife Report. October 2016 continued being mild and quiet with mostly easterlies for the first three weeks. The last week saw a change to westerly winds and the arrival of Atlantic weather fronts but they brought little in the way of rain to the city although the last few mornings were foggy or misty around sunrise. Heavy […]. Posted by Robert Mill. September 2016 Garden Wildlife Report. Posted by Robert Mill. August 2016 Garden Wildlife Report.
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Weekly Highlights – Botanics Stories
http://stories.rbge.org.uk/archives/tag/weekly-highlights+may
RBGE Personal and Project Stories. The Azalea collection is blooming. One of the best on the bank is. Reliable to flower, full of mid yellow blooms and the scent drifting through the lawn. These plants grow through S.E. Europe, Turkey and the Caucasus. Strong growing, deciduous, much branching shrubs. The flowers are followed by elongated seed capsules full of seed, much of which may be viable and can subsequently lead to self-seeding. Plant of the month. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. Plant of the month.
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Weekly Highlights – Botanics Stories
http://stories.rbge.org.uk/archives/tag/weekly-highlights+november
RBGE Personal and Project Stories. Out of season Daphne. Tagged with: Daphne gemmata. Plant of the month. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. Out of season beauty. In the corner of the QMM garden is a columnar tree full of lightly scented musty white flowers. Awash with flowers this. Is a deciduous member of the genus, native to South Island New Zealand. A plant to be appreciated in a season of decaying herbaceous growth and wet swirling leaves caught in corners of the garden. Tagged with: Hoheria lyallii.