Garden News (UK)

Christmas gifts from the garden

- Words Karen Murphy, GN’s eco-gardening expert

If there’s one word to describe gardeners, it’s thrifty. Yes, we can also be imaginativ­e, artistic and ever-hopeful, but perhaps our most admirable trait is the ability to reuse, recycle, make do and mend with commendabl­e ingenuity. It’s nice to see the value in everything, especially if it comes from the garden.

I love receiving homemade gifts, produced with little outlay from produce and plants off the plot, but made with a lot of time and care. My gardener and florist sister makes wonderful wreath decoration­s using pussy willow buds, grass flowers and dried helichrysu­m that’ll take pride of place in my house this winter, so I’ve been inspired to have a go and see what I can make myself for family and friends. Besides, it’s a nice, comforting project for dank, dark days!

There’s still plenty to glean from out there – ferns look lovely, seed heads still statuesque and lots of leaves, bark, grasses and stems to bring indoors. I had an idea to take some imprints from ferns and other leaves, pressing them into squares of air-drying clay (available from craft stores) and, after drying and a bit of painting, making some coasters, tiles, wall-hangings or tree decoration­s. It takes a bit of experiment­ation, but after one or two fails you eventually happen upon something you’d be happy to give as a gift! In a similar vein you can create leaf silhouette pictures or other gardenthem­ed artworks and make them into handmade Christmas cards.

To make use of stored garden harvests, it’s a lot of fun and quite easy to make jams, of course, and I have plenty of collected seed that I’ll pack up in small brown envelopes and hessian bags for green-fingered chums.

Cornus stems, chopped to fit, make naturalist­ic pot surrounds glued onto jars or boxes. You could try a willow-woven pot, too. There’s also endless scope for turning those ubiquitous little terracotta pots from the garden centre into crafty creations – I thought pebble pots might look quite nice. If you’ve had to chop down any hefty, thick tree limbs recently, consider that the wood, sawn into inch-thick circles, might make attractive coasters or ‘canvases’ for miniature paintings? And lastly, to remind myself that warmer, sunnier and more flowery days are to come, I’ve found a few old summery photos I took on my phone of beautiful blooms and borders. I might see how they look turned into postcards – useful and uplifting!

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Why not give a unique homemade present?
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