Tom Eaglestone
Eaglestone Landscape Design
Office: 01273 763865 Mobile: 07834 855788 Email:

Men, improve your sex life!

January 16th, 2009

According to studies recently published gardening as little as 30 minutes a week will improve your performance in bed. The conclusion of the research suggests that gardening will reduce the risk of men failing to live up to expectations by up to a third. Also you massively reduce the risk of impotence.

Anyway must dash, off to…

Good Food – “11 Best foods You Aren’t Eating”

January 14th, 2009

Have a look at this article from the New York Times – http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/06/30/the-11-best-foods-you-arent-eating/?em.

Latest Work

January 12th, 2009

3D images of a small urban garden where the clients are keen gardeners and requested beds for both ornamental planting and vegetables. A custom-built tree seat is situated underneath a Sorbus tree where they can relax and contemplate. Shutter panels line the boundary on two sides with a Fagus sylvatica (Beech) hedge at the back. A modern blue copper basin pond will complete garden.

DON’T BUY PEAT COMPOST!

January 7th, 2009

After all the publicity and debates about the decline of peat, customers are still buying peat compost in in their droves. We as gardeners are peat bogs biggest threat. Recent statistics show that gardeners are accountable for 70% of peat used in horticulture. This a horrifying statistic. There have been alternatives on the market for many years now. However these alternatives are swamped at garden centres by peat based products, so no wonder many still buy peat products.

Peat bogs annually release as much carbon dioxide (CO2) into the atmosphere as 400,000 family cars. Furthermore irreplaceable ecosystems are being destroyed when peat is extracted. 95% of our peat bogs have been lost this century, mainly due to gardeners. Our love for peat has to stop. The alternatives on the market do the same job and building your own compost heap will also provide you with lots of nutritious food for your plants.

It can be extracted sustainably, as I saw when visiting Northern Ireland last summer. Here it is extracted by hand rather than mechanically and only locals use the peat. When done mechanically vast reserves which have taken thousands of years to form can be destroyed over night.

Peat bog in Northern Ireland

Wildlife trusts have campaigned for many years now and have been instrumental in urging the government to take action. They are working on industry people to get in line with government targets of getting 90% of products peat-free by 2010.

If your local garden centre does not stock peat-free products ask why not. Also ask your local authority if they have signed the peatland protection charter (details from your local wildlife trust). For those of you who live or nearby Brighton visit Brighton Community Compost Centre to get your peat free compost.

Use only what you need…

January 7th, 2009