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When it comes to gardening, doing the groundwork is vital. Ensure your plants get off to the best possible start – and keep growing strong and healthy – with our top tips.
Different plants prefer different soils. If the soil is too heavy or light, you might need to improve its texture and quality. The three main types are:
Clay soil: has a sticky, muddy consistency and feels hard to dig. Add plenty of compost or well-rotted manure to break it up.
Sandy and/or chalky soil: falls easily through your fingers. Add well-rotted organic matter to make it more fertile and better hold moisture.
Somewhere between clay and sandy: young roots find it easy to spread through this fine tilth soil.
Most plants like a neutral to acid pH of around 6. To lower the pH of your soil, you could:
Tweak the soil’s natural pH by adding acid-based composts
Fill raised beds or containers with acidic soil
Only choosing plants that suit your existing soil may be easier than trying to change what’s already there.
Maybe you have a brand-new garden or some empty flower beds to fill. But before buying anything, make a planting plan:
Dig a hole the same depth as the pot, leaving an extra 2cm around the perimeter. Tease away soil around tight, matted root balls – don’t worry about breaking roots, new ones soon grow back. Add a slow-release fertiliser or liquid feed regularly.
For roses, trees and shrubs with bare roots, plant to the same depth as the soil ‘tide mark’ – this shows the depth it was previously planted. Fork the sides around the hole so the roots can spread comfortably. Add a layer of well-rotted manure, blood and bone, or mycorrhizal fungi. If needed, hammer in supporting stakes before planting.
Line the base of containers with a few bits of broken crockery to help with drainage, followed by compost and a little grit. You can also naturalise bulbs in the lawn, perhaps by grouping them around trees. And for a colourful display throughout spring, plant like you’re making a lasagne: tulips at the bottom, and earlier-flowering varieties such as crocus, near the top.
These small seedlings come in different sizes which you can grow on in larger pots before planting out into a container or border. Water the plugs before pushing gently out of the containers they were grown in. Some plant types also need ‘hardening off’ outside once the risk of frost has passed.