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Sally Nex Sally Nex | 07:00 UK time, Saturday, 9 April 2011

In the news...

Congratulations are due to the scientists at the who this week laid their claim to be the first country to produce a .

Campanula patula

Campanula patula

So what, you might ask? Well:Ìý the project has implications for wildflower conservation, honeybee populations, forensic science, the trade descriptions act, hay fever sufferers, livestock management and tackling climate change. And you thought plants were just there to look pretty.

Venus Flytrap

Venus Flytrap

If you're one of the growing army of fans of carnivorous plants – from pitcher plants, capable of eating a mouse, to spiny venus flytraps and pretty sundews (brilliant for controlling whitefly in the greenhouse, by the way) – do check you've bought them from a reputable source. A report this week revealed the main threat to the survival of carnivorous plants in the wild is not habitat loss, or climate change, but unscrupulous plant collectors who raid wild populations for specimens to sell to gardeners.

Elsewhere on the web...

It was a week for feasting your eyes: mostly on ravishing photographs of spring flowers, courtesy of , John Grimshaw at and who's been experimenting with a sweet little rainbow cutting garden for kids.
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And to cap it all, it was the heartbreakingly pretty at the Boconnoc Estate near Lostwithiel last weekend: all brilliant sunshine and a riot of camellias, daffodils, rhododendrons and hellebores. The Eden Project made a , while the head gardener at Trewithin was celebrating , rising magnificently to the challenge and creating a massive edifice of flowers from every spring flowering shrub you can think of (and quite a few you can't, I'll bet).

Good listen of the week: Ruth Sanderson learning how to pick rhubarb on a pick-your-own farm in Staffordshire for Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú Radio 4's Farming Today. There are some good Victorian rhubarb-growing tips, too: especially if you have an open fire. I'll say no more.

Out and about...

The kids are at home, Easter is on its way and it's spring: if there's ever been a week to enjoy being outside in the garden, this is it.

It may be a couple of weeks yet till Easter, but celebrations are starting early: this week there are bunnies to be found hidden among the shrubberies at in Oxfordshire, and clues to be solved on an Easter egg trail through the spectacular 26-acre gardens at near Welshpool.

The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, meanwhile, is turning the spotlight on to the cocoa tree by turning itself into a : there are Easter eggs, chicks, bunnies and – the pièce de résistance – an entire sculpture garden made from chocolate.

If your feet (and your wallet) have recovered from last week's , it's time to be off again: this time to the North of England's celebration of all things horticultural at the . It should be a real knees-up this year: the organisers, the North of England Horticultural Society, are celebrating their 100th birthday.

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