Gardening Magazine

The Garden Year in Words and Pictures

By Mwillis
Sitting contemplating my garden recently (as you do), it struck me how different it looks in each month of the year, and I thought it might be amusing to try to summarise the state of the garden in a single word for each month, and illustrate it with a single photo. Here goes...
January - Composting. Emptying the compost bins and putting the compost into containers for later use.
The garden year in words and pictures
February - Chitting. Seed potato tubers in egg-boxes, chitting (sprouting) on the windowsills.
The garden year in words and pictures
March - Waking. Rhubarb plants "waking up" after their hibernation.
The garden year in words and pictures
April - Sowing. This is the month in which most of my seed-sowing is done.
The garden year in words and pictures
May - Planting. This is the month in which I do most of my planting of seedlings like these brassicas and beans.
The garden year in words and pictures
June - Lifting. June is the month in which I start lifting potatoes - usually container-grown ones like these "Juliette" ones.
The garden year in words and pictures
July - Growing. The raised beds are full of swelling vegetables. Not prime harvesting time yet, but looking after the veg carefully now will pay dividends later.
The garden year in words and pictures
August - Harvesting. This is the month in which the harvests are most abundant.
The garden year in words and pictures
September - Preserving. The late Summer harvest is dried, pickled and pureed to preserve it for Winter use.
The garden year in words and pictures
October - Turning. Like when the leaves turn from green to red, yellow and orange.
The garden year in words and pictures
November - Protecting. The cloches are deployed to provide protection for over-Wintering plants like lettuces and chicory.
The garden year in words and pictures
December - Planning. A very pleasurable activity during the depths of Winter - planning garden projects and what to grow in the forthcoming year.
The garden year in words and pictures
One of the chief attractions of gardening as a hobby is its infinite variations. Although the gardening year usually follows a general pattern, no two years are the same, and the challenges presented by weather, pests, diseases and the vagaries of plants themselves are different every time! I think the ever-growing effect of Climate Change is probably the biggest challenge of the lot, because it brings us increasingly unpredictable and often extreme weather. Old gardening books sometimes tell us precisely when to sow each different type of vegetable, but these days I think it is unwise to rely on such advice. Instead one has to develop a "feel" for the conditions - and more than ever before - trust to luck!

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