Jobs to do in your garden during marvellous May
If you want to encourage bees and butterflies to your flower beds then think about some wildlife friendly summer bedding such as tobacco plants and petunias. You could also try some edible flowers like nasturtiums and borage.
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Hide AdNasturtiums are well suited to pots, beds and borders in full sun or partial shade – you can cut them back quite hard during the growing season and they will bounce back.
The flowers are best harvested in the morning just as they are opening and you can add both flowers and leaves to salads for a peppery flavour. Borage flowers have a refreshing taste that has a hint of cucumber.
As with nasturtiums, pick blooms early in the morning and then use them to brighten up a salad or add some zest to a sandwich. It’s best to harvest borage leaves when they are young for the best taste and texture.
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Hide AdAnother way to encourage wildlife into your garden is … to do nothing.
No Mow May is back this year, bringing another boost of much-needed nectar to pollinators as gardeners throughout the UK pledge not to mow their lawns for the month.
By keeping the mower locked up for another few weeks you give spring plants a chance to set seed before the first cutting, making for healthier, more diverse lawns. Figures show that if you mow less, the pollen count on your lawn can increase tenfold in the amount of nectar available to bees and other pollinators.
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Hide AdIn addition to stocking your garden with nectar producing plants, other top jobs for gardeners this month include:
Keeping a watch out for late frosts and making sure that tender plants are protected. Frost is particularly damaging to tender new growth and blossom in the spring. The risks of frost damage can be reduced by taking some simple steps to protect the plants in your garden such as fleecing, mulching or keeping them under cover.
Earthing up potatoes and planting any still remaining. Potato plants need ‘earthing up’ as they grow, to protect early shoots from frost damage and ensure the developing potatoes aren’t exposed to light, which turns them green and poisonous.
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Hide AdPlanting out summer bedding at the end of the month. Bedding plants provide a temporary decorative seasonal display for beds, borders, containers and hanging baskets.
Plus, here’s what the experts have to say …
Sowing and planting out bedding can begin, depending on regional weather variations, and you can take softwood cuttings. It's also time to get back into the lawn mowing regime, as the lawn will be loving the warmer temperatures this month brings.
RHS
For gardeners May is the loveliest month of the year. If your outside space is looking a little underwhelming, get down to your local garden centre and give it a shot in the beds and borders.
Alan Titchmarsh