Spring garden guide

Spring is the moment we gardeners have been looking forward to all Winter! Most of us are desperate to whip out our tools and get outside, and there’s plenty to do!

  • Now is a great time to focus on soil health. If you do nothing else in spring, do this! Read our blog post on dirt to learn more!

  • For lush green lawns, apply a slow release lawn fertiliser.

  • It's also a good time to top up your mulch and check your irrigation systems are working.

  • If you are planning on growing tomatoes, get the beds ready for planting around the end of September. Planting before that is risky due to night time temperatures. Get seeds started now, either on a sunny windowsill inside or outside with some protective covering.

  • Insects are making a return to the garden, so check for early signs of attack.  Planting flowers to attract beneficial insects is one way to keep insect populations under control and may reduce the need to use chemicals. 

  • White butterfly decoys can trick cabbage moths into going somewhere else and insect hotels can encourage more beneficial insects to make your garden their home. An effective organic treatment for cabbage moths is the product Dipel, which kills the caterpillars but does not affect beneficial insects.

  • Aphids are another insect that many people find in their garden. These can be dealt with using an oil such as Eco Oil, Pyrethrum spray, or just hosing them off with a strong jet of water.

Spring planting

  • Veggies: Beans, beetroot, carrots, eggplants, peas, leeks, lettuces, onions, spring onions, spinach, tomatoes

  • Fruit: Blueberries, mulberries, raspberries, passionfruit and strawberries

  • Flowers: Alyssum, cornflowers, cosmos, echinacea, eridgeron, geraniums, jasmine, lavender, lobelia, petunias, marigolds, nasturtiums, roses, sunflowers (and more!)

  • Herbs: Basil (late Spring), chives, dill, marjoram, mint, oregano, parsley, rosemary, sage, thyme

This is not an exhaustive list by any means, in Spring the planting options are endless! 

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A guide to tomato varieties

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It’s Spring and the bees are back!