Let's talk getting our gardens ready for spring

This is a collaborative post with The Big Yellow Self Storage Company.

We’re all spending more time at home at the moment whether we want to or not. And while there’s no doubt it’s an unsettling and strange time, I’m sure that like me, you’re determined to make the most of it. I’ve seen the posts about learning a new skill, or a new language, but quite honestly, I’d be happy to ‘catch-up’ with everything I put on my to do list, take time to enjoy my home and garden and that would see me quite happy enough, bar seeing family and friends of course.

I feel fortunate to have a garden and it’s a great way to get some exercise in, while staying home at the same time. And while I miss my daily visits to Greenwich Park, for the time being I can forgo those, and just wished that more people would take the social distancing situation we find ourselves in, more seriously.

The start of spring always brings fresh impetus and spring cleaning indoors and it’s no different in the garden. Below I’m sharing some tips on how you can get your garden ready for spring, some of which will come in handy whatever size your garden, or even if you only have a balcony or a windowsill.

Photo by Tom Byrom on Unsplash

Photo by Tom Byrom on Unsplash

1. Make space

Whatever you’re doing, you’ll do it better and more efficiently if you have space to work. Tidy ups around the garden include sorting out the beds ready for planting, and taking care of garden tools and equipment.

Make room for the tools - power tools or otherwise - you’ll use over the summer by placing all your winter kit into self storage. All that winter sports gear such as sledges or skis, your snow shovels, and autumn leaf blowers and winter tyres for the car are now just taking up space you can put to better use.

Having plenty of space in your garage or shed for the tools and equipment in regular use makes it easier to get to them more quickly to complete the job. It also means you don’t have things on top of each other, causing potential danger if heavy things drop, or you trip over them. Which is always good news if you’re as clumsy as me!

If you use a self storage unit, you will become part of the seasonal storage movement. There’s a growing army of people who now use self storage for seasonal rotation of items they’re not using at home. They have more space in the house, but get to keep all the household items needed for a comfortable lifestyle whatever the season. If you’re in a flat with a balcony and tend to keep winter stuff out there, clear it out into a self storage unit and make room for a few extra pots and seating.

2 . Tidy up

Tackle flower beds and borders so they’re ready for planting. Cut back dead growth on herbaceous perennials, and remove dead leaves and general rubbish that may have collected over winter. You can put organic matter in your compost bin, but if you’re weeding, place those in your green bin for the council to collect otherwise you’ll end up with a compost bin full of healthy weeds. And there’s nothing that weeds like more than a nice warm compost bin.

3. Prepare your greenhouse, if you have one

Give greenhouses a good clean and clear out before starting the new season with fresh growth. This is something that I’ll be adding to my list, I also want to rearrange my staging so I have as much growing space as possible. When cleaning you may need to:

  • Remove algae or moss from the glass.

  • Disinfect surfaces to kill off any residual pests or disease.

  • Wash out pots and seed trays, also to prevent transferring old pests and diseases to new plants.

  • Sweep the floor and sluice down with garden disinfectant.

  • Repair any structural damage you may have noticed during cleaning.

  • Open the windows to let in plenty of ventilation and dry off all the surfaces.

 It’s amazing how dirty greenhouses can get - I posted how much I was surprised by the difference a good clean makes a couple of years ago, and I still stand by that. Doing it, well that’s another matter!

4. Sow early seeds

Some plants like a long growing season, so it’s good to get them started as soon as possible. You’ll know your garden best but remember you can use a heated propagator to give them the best growing conditions, and you can use these anywhere indoors.

Plants to think about growing from seed include begonias and geraniums, antirrhinums (snap dragons or bunny rabbits) or if you’re into your edibles like me, then consider peppers, chillies, tomatoes and some herbs, the latter for more instant results. Check the backs of seed packets if you’re not sure what to sow, or when, they contain a wealth of information.

If you get all of these jobs done, you’ll be well on the way to a lush summer garden or balcony. And you’ll be able to sit back and reap the rewards, with perhaps making time to deadhead your plants to prolong their flowering, and eat sun-ripened tomatoes straight from the plant.

Let’s hope that this summer delivers, I think some warm sunny days are just what we can all do with (as long as we keep within whatever the rules are by then!)

* This is a collaborative post with The Big Yellow Storage Company, who remain open during our current lockdown, but like many companies have changed how they operate. They remain open as one of the listed businesses by the government, for further details please check on the Big Yellow website.

Post Comment Love 3-5 April

Hello there, what a week!

Welcome to this week’s #PoCoLo - a friendly linky which I co-host with Suzanne, where you can link any post published in the last week. We know you’ll find some great posts to read, and maybe some new-to-you blogs too, so do pop over and visit some of the posts linked and share some of that love.

I say what a week because this is the latest I think I’ve ever written my post. Or possibly the earliest, depending how you look at it. It’s currently 3am Friday morning - and ha! Autocorrect feels my pain as it changed Friday to Frustration! I haven’t been working until this time, but my evening was subsumed by it.

Typically it was the one night we had ‘plans’ - and I say that loosely, as our expectation of that too has changed. The plans were a virtual bar meet-up with colleagues, and the long-awaited and much anticipated online shop. I skipped the virtual bar, which was a shame as it was much needed and MOH took charge of the delivery. This was both appreciated and painful, and a reminder that he doesn’t know his way around our kitchen cupboards.

He also cooked tea, though there was little time to eat it as my phone kept going, and not once did he complain. He’s a keeper for sure. The worst of it was that the time was spent unraveling something my team had advised against, something we’d not been involved in in detail, and yet ‘needed’ to happen.

I shall take the moral high ground, but really I wish I didn’t have to, and I’ll post a picture of a very French flower shop and pretend I can breathe in the calming eucalyptus instead.

After all, it’s already another day…

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The Garden Year: April

What with everything going on - and by that I mean working at home, home life as well as adjusting to the ‘new normal’ - I realised that I hadn’t posted my monthly Garden Year link-up. And so I’m putting that right, as now, more than ever I think we want - and need - to see garden loveliness.

The posts for the year ahead will take a different approach and will feature on a plant of the month. For April, there’s no better choice, than magnolias. They really are magnificent.

And sorely lacking in my own garden. We did have a small plant for a good few years, but lost it one harsh winter. I was never convinced it was in the right spot, which is probably a contributing factor as why we’ve never replaced it. The other, is lack of space in our large-shrubbed and tree-filled garden!

If you’re thinking of adding a magnolia to your garden then opt for somewhere in full sun to light shade, in slightly acidic or neutral soil. They’re not keen on wind, or frost or waterlogged soil. And best of all they require little if any pruning, so if you have the right conditions they really are an almost maintenance-free plant, and pretty with it too.

April in the garden

It’s the month when things really start to take off. For us, it’s when we start pruning and re-taming in earnest, but this year we’re taking it a little more slowly so we don’t overload ourselves, and the council’s waste collection teams, which are already depleted due to the coronavirus situation.

On my to do list:

  • Tidy up the various jasmine plants, removing the twiggy growth from last year

  • Give the ivy on the patio its first ‘trim’ of the season

  • Deadhead the flower heads from the sedums which were left on overwinter

  • Repair and reattach some trellis which has come away from the fence

  • Start cutting the euonymus back so the hardy fuchsia and the recently discovered pyracantha can grown upright.

  • Move our tall black patio pots back into place - they’d been moved when our neighbour had his building work going on. Three of them are quite fragile though so we will either replace them all, or maybe just one, and move the fragile pots so they’re part of the beds and use them to add height in a couple of areas.

  • Uncover the pizza oven and extend the space on the patio for our new barbecue

  • Get sowing in the greenhouse. I’ve sown some seeds already, but need to get started with tomatoes, lettuce, herbs and beans at the minimum.

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This monthly gardening linky is open to any garden related post, whether it’s planning your own garden, an update on your space, or a garden you’ve visited and enjoyed, or like mine a list of things to do in the garden this month.

All posts are welcome, whether old or new.

“TheGardenYear

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