
While the world may feel rather dull at the moment, lockdown has at least enabled some people to go green and inject colour into their gardens.
With more time spent at home and a prolonged spell of sunny weather, many people across the district have taken to gardening. With the green light from the government for garden centres to reopen, people can now get their hands on all sorts of horticultural goods.
Megan Peel, co-owner of Kit Peel Gardens in Harrogate, has given some professional advice on things you can buy and grow now to give you lots of pleasure in the garden all summer long:
“If you are new to gardening its tempting to buy the things that look most enticing in the garden centre today rather than those plants which will go on providing you colour and interest all summer long and on into Autumn.”
Grow your own
If you are planning on growing some of your own fruit and veg this year, don’t be tempted to plant out young veg seedlings too early or they could be killed off by the late frosts we have up here in Yorkshire. Either wait a few weeks to buy or keep on a sunny window .. and gradually harden off outside in the daytime, bringing in at night until planting out when the risk of frost has well and truly passed.Our top tip is to start by growing what you love to eat, and focus on growing those things which taste better straight from the ground, or which are hard to come by in supermarkets. We grow a lot of courgettes, above all for the flowers – which we love to eat tempura style in a light beer batter, stuffed with ricotta and herbs; peas which the children pick and eat straight from the pod – and we also like to add the shoots to salads; beetroots and salads – which you can sew successionally every two weeks throughout the summer. Peas can also be sewn into June, as can carrots. Aim to have a few trays of young lettuce seedlings waiting in the wings, and you can fill in any gaps of bare earth with a quick ‘catch crop’ while plants around them are maturing – alternate neat lines of red and green lettuces, for an old fashioned potager look, adding rows of winter brassicas, onions and leeks that will mature in the autumn after the leeks after harvested. Growing beans in the same bed will help fix nitrogen in the soil and benefit the brassicas .If you don’t have the space to set aside for a dedicated veg patch then ornamental brassicas like Kale Lacinato and Red Drumhead cabbages can look eye catching planted in borders amongst your flowers. Edible flowers like nasturtiums; viola heartsease and marigold and cornflower petals can transform a simple summer salad into something special. “

What to plant at this time of year?
- Cosmos – The ultimate cut and come again cut flower… Quick to germinate, so there is still time for an indoor sowing from seed on a sunny windowsill before planting out after the last frosts. Plant a row and you will have buckets of cut flowers all summer long. The more you cut, the more flowers you will have.
- Dahlias – another cut and come again stalwart in an array of showstopping colours – often with flowers the size of dinner plates – and again the more you cut the more flowers you will have. At this time of year, it’s best to buy Dahlias in pots which have already been grown on from tubers. Dig them up in autumn and divide the tubers to propagate. Store the tubers in a cool dark shed, and fill the planting holes with tulips.
- Sweet pea seedlings – unbeatable for scent in the summer garden.. Buy seedlings now, and harden off outside in the daytime before planting out after the frosts.
- Cornflowers and Nigella – can be broadcast into soil raked to a fine tilth at the front of a border, or sewn in a cutting patch
- Salvias – find a sheltered spot for stunning tender perennials like Salvia Nachtvinsander – and they will reward you with scent and colour until late Autumn. Alternatively salvia nemerosa caradonna is hardy. Salvias are great to plant amongst roses as they protect from fungal diseases like black spot and powdery mildew.
- Pentsemon – another fantastic perennial to combine with roses that will continue flowering all summer long into autumn and which looks good planted amongst roses.
For Mediterranean memories…
“If you are sad to be missing out on your normal summer holiday in the Mediterranean and want to recreate a little of the holiday feeling at home – plants, especially scented ones, can help transport us back to favourite places.. If you have a sheltered sunny spot and your soil is not heavy clay.. then why not create a herb garden to recapture the holiday spirit”
- Lavender – a lavender hedge will not only look and smell great – but will also be brilliant for attracting pollinators into your garden all summer long – we nicknamed ours the Butterfly Bar last summer
- Thyme and sage, especially purple sage, make wonderful scented ground cover for the front of the border… and can of course be used in cooking.. or even cocktails..
- Tender herbs in pots.. plants basil. coriander, mint, parsley, lemon verbena in pots near the kitchen door – so you can nip out and cut a handful quickly when cooking dinner
- Euphorbia Wulfenii is a great big structural foliage plant that looks dramatic all year round and works well interplanted with Verbena Boniarensis