Winter - Smart gardening tips

Guest blog, written by Julianne Robertson.

As autumn is well underway, and our thoughts are turning to the winter months, this is a good point in the year to have a think about the structure and landscaping of your garden. Now is the time to make some preparations which will improve water conservation, ready for next year’s growing season.

Here are 5 things to consider when you’re planning your 2025 garden.

 

Hard surfaces

Does your garden drain the rain? And do you wonder why your street or driveway keeps flooding?  It’s because too many hard surfaces, driveways and paved over gardens aren’t allowing rainwater to drain away properly.

  • monoblock paths and drive ways drain poorly and pool water
  • paving, tarmac and concrete are also less porous
  • additional water flows into street drains, putting pressure on the sewer network – that’s why localised flooding can occur, affecting people’s homes and gardens

So what can you do instead? Keep hard surfaces in your outdoor space to a minimum – and go for grass or gravel when you’re landscaping. If you’re building a new driveway, patio or path – or planning an upgrade – then choose permeable paving. Gravel is especially cheap and you can plant into it easily. Consider also retaining as much grass in your front garden as possible – it’s better for biodiversity and it holds rainwater, preventing runoff.

 

Avoid artificial grass

When your grass is living, there’s life in your grass – and the rest of your garden benefits too:

  • grass and the soil below it supports a huge ecosystem of insects, worms, nutrients and micro-organisms
  • daisies, dandelions and other wildflowers in your lawn are food for bees, flies and other pollinators
  • it’s a feast for the senses – walking barefoot on grass, the smell of a freshly mown lawn, the sound of bees buzzing on the flowers, a lush, green oasis of calm

Artificial grass may seem like a good alternative – but it has a really big carbon footprint caused by manufacture, transport and installation, and it involves huge areas of plastic which can’t be recycled.

Although it’s designed to drain, water runoff can be a problem with fake grass, as doesn’t absorb rain in the same way as soil; plus, micro-plastics are washed into the ground, polluting it for centuries. Although it seems like an easier, low-maintenance option, artificial lawns have serious implications for the environment, including water conservation.

 

Install a water butt

Now is actually a great time to think about how to reduce your overall water use – a few preparations will set you up for next year’s growing and reduce the likelihood of flooding during the wetter months. It’s the perfect time to install a water butt, to collect any rainfall in the coming months – it should be nice and full come Spring 2024! You can watch our video on installing a water butt here.

 

Autumn planting

Autumn is a great time to get new plants in the ground, giving them time to put down roots and reduce the need for extra watering when it’s warm again. Many are sold bare-root during autumn and winter, which often reduces the packaging required too. Bare-root is just what it sounds like – the plants are sold without pots and soil, and it doesn’t cause them any harm because they’re dormant. They often benefit from a good soak in a bucket of water before being placed into their planting spot with some fresh compost.

You could consider filling those gaps in your borders with more drought-tolerant planting too – for example, scented Lavender, soft Stachys, bee-friendly Echinops and swooshy Stipa are all great examples of sun-lovers which don’t need much watering, even in a heatwave.

 

Mulching

Mulching your beds and borders is a one of the top tasks to undertake in autumn  – there are so many benefits for your garden, including helping to lock moisture in the soil, reducing the need for watering. Mulching simply involves spreading a layer of organic matter on the surface of the soil – this can be compost, spent soil from tubs and containers, leaf mould, grass clippings, chipped wood or bark or any other dead plant material. The mulch will gradually be broken down over time by weather and insects, and absorbed into the soil, making it healthier and introducing nutrients to help feed your plants naturally.

Mulching with homemade compost is even better, as it’s a really circular way to re-use the clippings, prunings and old plant material you’ve collected over the course of the previous year. Allowing these to break down in a compost bin or heap will provide you with nutrient rich mulch, returning the goodness back into your garden.