Sowing & growing
- Prepare ground for hardy annuals. Clear and rake ground.
- You can start sowing hardy annual seeds inside now, if you are impatient for early flowers. Sow them in your greenhouse in seed trays, gutter pipes or Jiffy Pellets. If you don’t have a greenhouse, use a window ledge propagator or seed tray inside and this will work well to get your seeds going. Some of my favourites include: Ammi majus, Anethum graveolens, Calendula offinicalis ‘Indian Prince’, Cerinthe major and all the Scabious. Don't be tempted to sow too many seeds this early in the sowing season – they may become leggy & drawn out due to low light levels at this time of year.
- Start sowing slow-growers under cover – like antirrhinums & cobaea.
- Order dahlias, gladioli & other summer flowering bulbs.
- Now is a good time to add organic fertiliser to your borders. Blood, fish and bone, seaweed or pelleted chicken manure is ideal. Follow the instructions on the packet.
- Pot on cuttings of tender perennials taken in the autumn.
- If there is a dry spell, remember to water containers.
Bulbs & tubers
- You could try planting some nerines for inside – they’ll look wonderful in the autumn. Plant them in terracotta pots with John Innes no.3 loam-based compost, and don’t forget to add some grit.
- Plant snowdrops in the green and divide any larger congested clumps if you have any already in the garden.
- Plant deliciously-scented lily bulbs in pots and in your borders. Choose the amazing taller varieties for the back of the beds like ‘Casa Blanca’ or asiatic ‘Nerone’ and the shorter ones like speciosum var. rubrum 'Uchida' or ‘White America’ in the pots. See here for our step-by-step lily growing guide.
- Start dahlia tubers in to growth.
- Plant Lily of the Valley (Convallaria).
- Bring pots of spring bulbs into the greenhouse to encourage flowering.
- Water containers of bulbs and spring bedding if we have a dry spell.
- Keep forced hyacinths that have flowered early inside. Rather than throwing them out, plant them outside. Choose a sunny spot, dig a circle, line it with grit and turn out the bulbs. Cover them with more grit mixed into the soil, leaving the foliage intact, rather than cutting it back.
Harvesting
- Bulbs: crocus, snowdrops, aconites, cyclamen, Iris reticulata.
- Perennials: hellebores, artichoke leaves, polyanthus, primroses, violets, Euphorbia characias in bud.
- Shrubs and Trees: hamamelis, sarcococca, pussy willow, hazel and alder catkins, scented daphnes, winter-flowering honeysuckles and viburnums.
- Pick small posies of any flowers you have. You may think these are all too tiny to pick, but little bunches can be held together with rubber bands and slotted through a wooden noughts and crosses grid, laid flat over a small bowl of water. Add a sprig or two of daphne and viburnum for extra scent.




