Get into gardening

October

Knowing what grows well in the garden is really important. But with 12 months a year, remembering what, when and where can be tricky. That’s why we’ve put together this seasonal calendar. So you can check what you could be doing this month, and what you should be planting later in the year.

Things to do

This month, give your plants in pots a boost with a liquid feed and good watering. Also before you start bringing tender plants in for winter, give your greenhouse a clean to kill any diseases and bugs.

October
Bedding plants

Bedding Plants

The main jobs this month are clearing away the remains of the summer bedding plants, and preparing non-hardy plants for the first frosts. You can also plant bulbs ready for early spring.
Bulbs

Bulbs

Plant your spring bulbs (for a great range pop to Homebase).
Containers

Containers

Boost whatever flower blooms you have left with a liquid feed.
Raise containers to prevent water logging.
Plant autumn/winter bedding plants in containers and baskets to add some colour between autumn and spring.
Fruit

Fruit

Once you've picked your last raspberries, cut back the canes that have produced fruit to ground level, and tie in the best new canes.

Harvest apples, pears and plums.
(Make sure you store apples carefully by wrapping them up individually in newspaper).

Remove tomato leaves to expose unripe fruit.

Cover fig trees with netting and fill with straw to keep the developing figs free from frost – allowing them to grow next year.

Pick hazelnuts and cobnuts when they start to change colour to an orange/brown.

Plant bare-root gooseberry bushes – a wide range of dormant fruit trees and bushes is available at Homebase. Plant new fruit trees while the soil is still warm.
Greenhouse

Greenhouse

Before you return tender plants to the greenhouse, give the interior a good clean to keep it hygienic over winter.
Hedges

Hedges

Keep up the weekly mowing and edge trimming to maintain a healthy green lawn. Repair and renovate your lawn by raking it vigorously to remove any dead or dying grass.
Herbs

Herbs

Keep up the weekly mowing and edge trimming to maintain a healthy green lawn. Repair and renovate your lawn by raking it vigorously to remove any dead or dying grass.
Houseplants

Houseplants

As the garden slows down for winter, bring some colour inside by planting Hyacinth bulbs now.
Lawn

Lawn

Finish sowing new lawns while it's still warm enough for the grass seed to germinate. And keep cutting the lawn for as long as you can (while the grass is growing).

Clear up fallen autumn leaves as often as possible to stop your lawn getting damaged.

If you’re planning to renovate old lawns or create new grass areas, now's the time to lay turf.
Perennials (winter surviving plants)

Perennials (winter surviving plants)

After the first frosts, lift your dahlia tubers and cut back foliage to about 10cm above the tuber.
Tender plants such as bananas need protecting from winter, so wrap them up in a fleece before the first frosts.
Cut back any perennials plants that have died down.
Divide herbaceous perennials (like Hollyhock) now.
Roses

Roses

Large rose bushes benefit from being lightly cut back to prevent autumn wind damage.
Shrubs

Shrubs

As shrubs lose their leaves it becomes easier to see their overall shape. Give them a light prune if needed to improve their looks.

If a shrub has outgrown its space, now's the time to move it to a better location – remember to water it in well.
Vegetables

Vegetables

Now's the time to plant early broad beans, onions, spring cabbages and rhubarb. It also a good opportunity to dig over your veg patch and put some manure down.

Harvest Pumpkins and Squashes and leave them in a sunny but dry location to allow their skins to harden (then store them in a cool, dry, dark place).

Lift potatoes, carrots and beetroot, but leave parsnips until they have been frosted.
Carry on picking remaining beans and onions.
Water all crops where required.
Wildlife

Wildlife

Plant evergreen shrubs such as Ilex (holly) & Pracantha to provide shelter and food for wildlife during winter (available in Homebase stores between September and October).

You can also plant evergreen hedges too, they’re a good all year screen from neighbours and provide nesting areas for birds.

get top tips

If you haven't got room for a compost heap and like growing roses, dig an old banana skin or two into the earth below the rose bush.  Roses love the minerals in the skins and will flourish better
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