Year: 2025

Plant heathers for late seasonal colour

When summer ends, gardeners can enjoy fresh bursts of colour from autumn-flowering heathers. These hardy plants, mostly from the Erica genus, help keep gardens lively well into the cooler months. Their small, bell-shaped flowers brighten up borders from late summer…

How do I organically deal with the cabbage aphid

Cabbage aphids, scientifically known as Brevicoryne brassicae, are a common pest for gardeners cultivating brassicas, such as cabbage, broccoli, kale, and cauliflower. These small, waxy, grey-green insects feed in dense clusters, sucking the sap from leaves and stems. This feeding…

Provide water for wildlife

Providing fresh water in your garden is one of the easiest and most vital tasks you can undertake. A dry spell is always possible. Even as autumn approaches, natural water sources such as puddles and small streams can be scarce….

Time to pot up prepared Hyacinths

Planting prepared hyacinth bulbs is a simple, rewarding process. It brings the promise of beautiful, fragrant blooms to your home, often in time for Christmas or late winter. Prepared bulbs have been pre-chilled, which mimics the natural cold period they…

What to do in September

September is a pivotal month for easy-care gardening, offering a blend of both winding down and preparing for the next season.  This is the perfect time to deadhead spent blooms, especially on perennials and roses, to encourage a final flush…

Dividing plants in September

Dividing perennial plants is a fundamental gardening task that offers a host of benefits, and September is an ideal time to perform this chore. As the vibrant growth of summer begins to wane, the cooler temperatures and increased rainfall of…

Get new plants for free by taking cuttings

September is a great time to propagate plants from cuttings, a simple and free way to get more plants for your garden. The new growth from spring and early summer has now matured, reaching a stage that gardeners call “semi-ripe”…

Take stock of your garden

September is an ideal time to reflect on your garden’s past year. As summer blooms fade and foliage changes, walk through your garden with a critical eye. Observation is one of the most valuable tools for ensuring next season’s success….

Continue to deadhead spent flowers

September marks a transitional period in the garden, as the vibrant displays of summer begin to wane and a subtle autumnal palette takes hold. For the low-maintenance gardener, this is not a time for intense work, but rather for focused…

Leave some seed heads for wildlife

For the easy-care gardener, September is a month of thoughtful decisions. While the impulse to deadhead every spent flower for a tidy finish is strong, a truly wildlife-friendly approach involves pausing to consider the bigger picture. Leaving some spent flowers…