The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Don’t leave it to pot luck – be prepared for the new season

Winter may be just around the corner – but that needn’t mean a colour-free garden. Tend to containers now to create some instant magic

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As the summer fades and the new season approaches, why not plant some pretty pots to brighten up your garden.

As pots of tired summer bedding are tipped on to the compost heap to make way for new autumn and winter flowers, there are certain procedures you can do now to ensure your container plants for the cooler months get off to a good start. Here’s some top tips.

Provide good drainage

Once you’ve emptied your pots of summer bedding and given the containers a good clean, line the base of your pots with crocks from broken terracotta pots or bits of polystyren­e that your new bedding comes in, to make sure you have ample drainage for new autumn and winter bedding.

As autumn rains come, if your pots are exposed to the elements, the roots of your plants can become too wet if you don’t include sufficient drainage when you plant them up.

Mix a handful of sharp stone or grit into the fresh compost to help drainage and stand your pots on feet, so the moisture doesn’t come up through the pot and soak the roots from below.

Fill pots well

Unlike summer bedding, which grows rapidly to cover the whole area of the pot, winter bedding is slower to make an impact – so it’s best to plant winter bedding closer together in tubs, troughs and hanging baskets.

They probably won’t have as much growing time as summer plants had to make their mark, so don’t penny-pinch on the amount you buy.

Don’t over-water

Winter-flowering pansies and other bedding won’t need as much water as your summer annuals did, so don’t mix water-retaining granules into the fresh compost, or you’ll end up with rotten roots and wilted plants.

Shelter containers

If you have planted up pots with spring bulbs, violas and pansies, put them in a sheltered spot – say under a porch or cold greenhouse when the winter weather is at its worst – but make sure they get maximum light so they can benefit from even weaker sunshine.

As the weather gets cooler, protect plants by grouping containers and moving them closer to the wall to keep off wind and rain.

Choose plants wisely

Some bedding only appears in the autumn, including dwarf Michaelmas daisies, pot chrysanthe­mums and miniature cyclamen, while orange-berried winter cherries and ornamental kales appear slightly later on in the season.

All can be put to good use in a container and enhanced with evergreen foliage plants.

Garden centres will now be awash with autumn and winter bedding, including pansies and violas, wallflower­s, dianthus and cyclamen.

Use a showstoppe­r as the centre plant and then use trailers, such as creeping Jenny or ivy, around the outside of your pots, filling the gaps with pretty violas and pansies.

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 ??  ?? Sprinkle some colour on your garden with cyclamen, top, chrysanthe­mums, below, and stunning violas.
Sprinkle some colour on your garden with cyclamen, top, chrysanthe­mums, below, and stunning violas.
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