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Gardening Hub

Practical guides on waiting lists, getting your first plot, and running a great allotment society.

  • seasonal guidesjanuarywinter

    What to Do on Your Allotment in January

    January is the quietest month on the plot — but it is far from idle. Plan your year, force rhubarb, chit early potatoes, and get the beds ready for the rush ahead.

    allotments.info editorial · 6 January 2026

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  • seasonal guidesfebruarywinter

    What to Do on Your Allotment in February

    February brings the first real signs of the growing season. Start tomatoes and peppers under heat, sow onions and leeks, and keep an eye out for the first purple sprouting broccoli.

    allotments.info editorial · 2 February 2026

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  • seasonal guidesmarchspring

    What to Do on Your Allotment in March

    March is the busiest sowing month of the year. Potatoes go in, the first outdoor seeds can go directly in the ground, and the propagator is running at full capacity.

    allotments.info editorial · 2 March 2026

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  • seasonal guidesaprilspring

    What to Do on Your Allotment in April

    April is planting month. First earlies are in the ground, asparagus is rising, and tender plants started indoors are hardening off ready for the outside world.

    allotments.info editorial · 6 April 2026

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  • seasonal guidesmayspring

    What to Do on Your Allotment in May

    May is the most exciting month: last frost passes, tender crops go out, and the first asparagus and early salads reach the table. The whole plot comes to life.

    allotments.info editorial · 5 May 2026

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  • seasonal guidesjunesummer

    What to Do on Your Allotment in June

    June is harvest season starting. The first courgettes appear, peas and broad beans are ready, strawberries ripen, and the main challenge shifts from sowing to managing what you have.

    allotments.info editorial · 1 June 2026

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  • seasonal guidesjulysummer

    What to Do on Your Allotment in July

    July is peak season. Tomatoes start to colour, beans are prolific, and the challenge is harvesting fast enough. A missed day and your courgette becomes a marrow.

    allotments.info editorial · 6 July 2026

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  • seasonal guidesaugustsummer

    What to Do on Your Allotment in August

    August is glut month. Tomatoes, beans, courgettes, cucumbers, and sweetcorn all peak at once. Preserve, share, and sow autumn and winter crops while you still have time.

    allotments.info editorial · 3 August 2026

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  • seasonal guidesseptemberautumn

    What to Do on Your Allotment in September

    September is harvest and preparation month. Bring in squash and pumpkins, ripen green tomatoes, plant garlic, and start clearing beds ready for winter compost.

    allotments.info editorial · 7 September 2026

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  • seasonal guidesoctoberautumn

    What to Do on Your Allotment in October

    October is garlic month. Plant the main crop, lift root vegetables before hard frosts, and taste parsnips after the first frost — you will not be disappointed.

    allotments.info editorial · 5 October 2026

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  • seasonal guidesnovemberwinter

    What to Do on Your Allotment in November

    November is the wind-down — but not the stop. Finish planting garlic, dig empty beds, order seeds for next year, and get your tools ready for winter.

    allotments.info editorial · 3 November 2026

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  • seasonal guidesdecemberwinter

    What to Do on Your Allotment in December

    December is the planning month. Review the year, order seeds, repair beds, and enjoy the Brussels sprouts and parsnips that are now at their absolute best.

    allotments.info editorial · 1 December 2026

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