
Clear up and clean
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Sweep up leaves (where slugs and snails often hide) and use to make a nutritious leaf mould – but avoid rose leaves which have the fungal disease, black spot.
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Place netting over ponds to prevent leaves falling in – putting any cleared pondweed on the side for a day to allow wildlife to crawl back into the water.
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Spray fruit trees with a winter wash solution to kill off pests and their eggs.
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Wash and disinfect the greenhouse.
Protect from the weather
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Help nourish the soil by digging compost into borders and spreading bark chips on top to insulate plant roots and suppress weed growth.
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Store potatoes, onion and garlic bulbs in breathable hessian sacks and onion bags – removing any rotting bulbs first.
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Prevent waterlogging by raising pots off the ground using bricks or 'pot feet'.
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Install a cold frame to keep young plants safe from extreme weather.
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Bring half-hardy plants such as zinnias into a greenhouse or cover with fleece.
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Secure outer leaves around cauliflower heads using string.
Lift up and relocate
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Divide overcrowded herbaceous perennials, and move shrubs around – when plants are dormant, they’re more tolerant to being dug up and relocated.
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Lift begonia tubers, dahlia tubers and gladioli corms to store over winter, removing dead foliage first.
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Split congested rhubarb clumps into pieces with a spade and re-plant the healthiest looking bits.
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Shelter tender plants in the greenhouse, and move citrus trees to a sunny spot indoors, away from cold draughts and radiators.
Cut back and prune
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Trim tall hedging like privet, sea buckthorn and cherry laurel bushes.
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Cut back dead perennial plants but leave some foliage behind to provide homes for wildlife.
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Take hardwood cuttings from deciduous shrubs like hydrangea and fuchsia.
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Prune climbing roses – tying the stems before autumn winds cause damage.
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Cut back the old canes of summer fruiting raspberries, leaving new green shoots for next year's crop.
Harvesting and planting
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Harvest peas and beans before cutting the plants down to ground level.
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When picking cabbages, cut across the stem to encourage smaller leaves to grow.
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Test if pumpkins and squashes are ripe using your fingernail – if it doesn’t pierce the rind, they’re ready.
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Prepare your veg plot for spring by digging trenches and filling with manure or kitchen waste.
Lawn care
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Rake away dead thatch to help light reach the grass.
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Carry out the last mow and recut lawn edges with a spade.
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Avoid soil compaction by aerating with a garden fork and repair any bare patches with fresh turf.
A friend to nature
Install bird feeders and bird baths – your feathered friends will thank you by eating garden pests.

If you’re new to gardening, knowing what to do and when can seem daunting at first. To help you along the way, we’ve put together some tips on which tasks will help keep your garden flourishing – and examples of plants that best suit the season.