Looking for the best mini chainsaw for your next garden tidy up? Ditch your old loppers and take a look at our review.
Don’t miss your chance to spend an evening with award-winning British garden designer and BBC Gardeners’ World presenter Adam ...
Lords-and-ladies (Arum maculatum) is a native British perennial plant with large waxy leaves, green-white spathes and bright red berries. It's typically found growing in woodland, hedgerows and waste ...
Gravel gardens are an attractive way to transform part, or all of the garden, into a drought tolerant, low-maintenance display. The planting style is soft and informal, often with no barrier between ...
Barbecue areas can range from a bench and a tabletop barbecue on a patio to a full-scale outdoor kitchen edging a seating area. The type of barbecue you choose, and how you decide to arrange your ...
Ox-eye Daisy (Leucanthemum vulgare) is a beautiful grassland perennial that works well in garden meadows, wildlife corners and even ornamental borders. Britain's largest member of the daisy family, ...
Garden styles change over time, as do the tastes of the gardeners who create them. What may be considered modern now will be seen as old fashioned in a few years' time, and what might be seen as in ...
Skunk cabbage or American skunk cabbage (Lysichiton americanus) is a plant in the arum family, and looks similar to our native lords-and-ladies. Native to western North America, it bears a large ...
If your garden has clay soil, particularly heavy clay soil, you may feel that you have limited options for growing plants. Clay soil can be sticky, hard to work and is easily compacted. But it’s also ...
This festive wreath is made with colourful plants or parts of them that should be easy to source from the garden, parks or florists. Secure the fir sprigs to the base Secure three short sprigs of fir ...
This silvery white wreath combines silvery green leaves and stems, with white flowers and berries, to give your front door a magical, ethereal feel. Forage in your garden or on country walks for as ...