Category: Gardening equipment and tools


Guest article by Elizabeth Grey

Mothering Sunday is fast approaching, this year falling on 30th March. If your mum or granny is a keen gardener, there’s plenty of scope to get her a much more interesting present than the typical flowers, chocolates, perfume or smellies, and a gardening related gift is something that can be treasured for years to come.

Even if your mother has a shed bursting with much-loved gardening tools and there’s not room for another cutting in her garden, there are still a wide selection of thoughtful green-fingered gifts which she will be delighted to unwrap.

For the gardener who likes to read

Mr_McGregor's_garden_at_Hill_Top_Farm_-_geograph.org.uk_-_1264402Mr McGregor’s Garden at Hill Top Farm, Cumbria

If your mum enjoys curling up with a book or magazine, consider treating her to a horticultural read so she can carry on immersing herself in her passion even when it’s not possible to be out in the garden.

Beatrix Potter’s books are some of the most charming children’s books ever written, and if you have fond memories of reading Peter Rabbit with your mum as a child, Marta McDowell’s Beatrix Potter’s Gardeners Life might be an ideal gift. Beautifully illustrated, the book explores the link between Potter’s Lake District gardens and her work.

Slugs are the bane of gardeners’ lives, so this book about 50 Ways to Kill a Slug is a good fit for a gardener who enjoys a humorous look at dealing with one of their least favourite molluscs.

A gardening magazine subscription provides your mum with a year round source of inspiration and the chance to discover what’s going on in some of the country’s most interesting gardens. Subscriptions can come with added bonuses, for instance, if you subscribe to The Garden magazine you get membership of the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) and all the benefits which that brings.

For the gardener who likes to explore

chelsea physic gardenChelsea Physic Garden. Photo credit: Karen V Bryan

The UK is very lucky to have so many beautiful and unusual gardens, and taking your mum to visit one of these can create treasured memories as well as being an enjoyable day out. Many gardens also put on special child-friendly fun and learning days, which can be a wonderful day out for three generations – perhaps you could surprise your mum afterwards with a framed photo showing her introducing her grandchildren to her favourite hobby.

In London, the Chelsea Physic Garden in home to over 5,000 plants, many of which have a medicinal purpose, that flourish in the Garden’s mild microclimate. It’s a refreshing retreat from the capital’s hustle and bustle, and hosts regular family days throughout the year.

The Trebah Garden in Cornwall is rated in the top eighty garden globally, and is somewhere that no keen horticulturalist should miss out on visiting. Some highlights include the water garden, which in late spring is carpeted with Arum lilies; the hydrangea valley, which covers two acres of riverside garden with unusually vivid flowers; and its own secluded private beach, complete with complimentary buckets and spades.

For the gardener who likes bees

beePhoto credit: Andreas.

The worldwide decline in bee numbers is cause for concern as they pollinate about a third of all food crops, while 90% of all wild plants need insect pollination to survive. As a result, many gardeners are trying to make their gardens havens for bees in order to reduce this trend.

If your mum is one of these gardeners, a bee box would be an appreciated and thoughtful gift. The boxes, which are often attractive features in their own right, give shelter to solitary bees like the Red Mason and Leaf Cutter.

Bees love traditional British garden plants like roses, lavender, hollyhocks and edible herbs. So if your mum has space in her garden, one of these plants is a good gift. Pots of edible herbs are a particularly good choice if your mum also enjoys cooking, or is gardening is a small space.

For the gardener who likes to entertain

Photo credit: Kew on Flickr

There’s little more enjoyable than inviting friends over to take afternoon tea outdoors or spending a warm night relaxing in your garden with wine, food and good company. If your mum loves to host garden get-togethers there are plenty of entertaining accessories that make lovely gifts. Prices on these start at pocket-money levels, and there’s often a selection of matching goodies, so it’s easy to buy a set of gifts from all the family.

Solar powered garden lights have quickly become a must-have garden accessory, and fairy lights create a particularly special atmosphere when they’re interlaced around a trellis panel. For anyone sitting outside after dark, citronella candles are an essential accessory to repel bugs. Ones that come in brightly coloured buckets make a feature out of a necessity.

If you really want to splash out on a mother’s day gift, a garden swing seat adds a touch of luxury and style to any garden and is always popular with guests. Wooden swing seats are suitable to be outside in all weathers, so your mum can turn the seat into a permanent focal point, or even hang the seat from a plant-covered pergola.

Thanks to Elizabeth for some great ideas – you can follow Elizabeth on Twitter https://twitter.com/ej_grey

Old School Gardener

 

PicPost: Garden Wrap

Disguise your ugly garden structures with vertical planting!

Here are a few whizz ideas for garden seating…most made from pallets and other recycled materials.

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I came across a few pictures of unusual, but stylish planters most of which involve recycling – hope you enjoy them!

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How to Build a Propagation Bench

How to build a propagation bench

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Specifier Review's avatarArchitecture, Design & Innovation

Mobilane, the leading supplier of living wall systems and green screens has launched an irrigation-free living wall which is an upgraded version of its popular Live Panel that requires minimal maintenance.

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Live Panel 2 is suitable to cover large external walls or interior spaces and is based on exactly the same principle as Live Picture – a product it launched in 2013, which is a framed arrangement of plants designed for small indoor spaces.   The Live Panel 2 system uses a tank watering system which is refilled usually no more than once per week, depending on the size of the wall.  It is much quicker to install and costs less to maintain making Live Panel 2 being one of the most cost effective living walls on the market.

“Interest in our irrigation free wall has already begun” said Sean Farrell Director of Mobilane “The fact that we have a…

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Using pallets and other recycled materials to create useful garden equipment and features seems to have really taken off in the last year- at least the posts I’ve made to Old School Garden during that time are among my most popular.

My own exploits to date have been limited to a set of vertical planters, shortly to be used as mini raised beds for some young children at my local primary school. Following a bit of a reorganisation of outside stores here at the Old School, I have a redundant wooden bicycle rack which looks perfect as the base for a ‘plant theatre’ so I might get round to doing that as the days lengthen and (hopefully) the air warms up. In the meantime here’s the latest batch of ideas I’ve gleaned from Facebook sites like 1001 pallets, urban gardens, container gardening and the like. Enjoy!

First some sheds, shacks and greenhouses….

 

Next a few planters…..

And now some serious outdoor building work…..

Finally a few odds and ends…..

Old School Gardener

How to build a Cold Frame

‘Spring is around the corner and it will soon be time to start sowing seeds.

For those of us who haven’t got a greenhouse, (especially a nice warm one like our editor Maddy’s, who has been using her hot bin composter to keep her greenhouse above freezing all winter), the unpredictable weather can have a huge impact on when we start our seeds. With the possibility of late frosts, seeds can be easily damaged, right through to April and May.

So making a cold frame is a great way to start off your seeds in a warmer and more protected environment, until they are strong enough to be planted out in the unpredictable weather……’

Great idea from Permaculture Magazine – click on the title link for further information and other useful links

Old School Gardener

An unusual ‘themed threesome’ of garden/outdoor projects – fancy a cuppa something?

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A couple of interesting ideas for recycling tyres into useful garden equipment.

Strips of old tyre rubber used as edgings for grass- hmm...how practical, how aesthetic?

Old tyre rubber re-formed into strips as edgings for grass- hmm… practical? aesthetic?

A neat row of tyre containers- herbs? grass-lined seats?

A neat row of tyre containers- herbs? grass-lined seats?

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