Master My Garden Podcast

John Jones

Master My Garden podcast with John Jones. The gardening podcast that helps you master your own garden. With new episodes weekly packed full of gardening tips, how to garden guides, interviews with gardening experts on many gardening topics and just about anything that will help you in your garden whether you are a new or a seasoned gardener. I hope you enjoy.John

  1. 3 DAYS AGO

    EP329- Ealma The Poppy Garden Open Garden Feature: A Quirky Irish Open Garden

    This weeks sponsor:  Probio Carbon enriched biochar https://www.probiocarbon.ie A one-acre garden can feel like a whole world if you design it for discovery, and Elma’s Poppy Garden proves it. We’re back with our open garden features, heading to a “quirky Irish garden” in County Meath where winding paths, salvaged treasures, and bold planting choices create that constant sense of what’s around the next bend. We talk about the honest beginnings most of us recognise: a new build site, uncovered topsoil turning into a weed factory, and a first tiny flower bed that flips a switch. Elma shares the real learning curve behind the charm, from plants that simply refuse to thrive to the moment a soil test explains everything. If you garden on alkaline soil, you’ll pick up practical, low-fuss approaches for choosing the right plants, using containers, and stopping expensive mistakes from repeating. Then we take a virtual walk through the garden: woodland shade created by fast-growing trees, cheap DIY woodland paths with cardboard and mulch, black bamboo used for sound and surprise, and a house wrapped in climbers. We also get into pot displays, nursery plants you don’t see everywhere, and brilliant upcycling ideas like turning old school lockers into planters. Along the way, we dig into autumn colour favourites, standout conifers and specimen trees, plus what wet ground teaches you when an orchard plan doesn’t quite deliver. If you enjoy open gardens, cottage garden style planting, and straight-talking advice that makes you feel braver about experimenting, you’ll get loads from this one. Subscribe for more, share it with a gardening friend, and if you enjoy the podcast, please leave us a review. To visit The Poppy Garden plan here  https://www.thepoppygarden.com If there is any topic you would like covered in future episodes, please let me know. Email:  info@mastermygarden.com    Check out Master My Garden on the following channels    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mastermygarden/  Instagram @Mastermygarden https://www.instagram.com/mastermygarden/     Until next week   Happy gardening   John   Support the show If there is any topic you would like covered in future episodes, please let me know. Email:  info@mastermygarden.com    Check out Master My Garden on the following channels    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mastermygarden/  Instagram @Mastermygarden https://www.instagram.com/mastermygarden/     Until next week   Happy gardening   John

    50 min
  2. 1 MAY

    - EP328 What To Sow In May & Other Gardening Jobs : May Sowing Guide

    This weeks sponsors:  Probio Carbon enriched biochar https://www.probiocarbon.ie Seeds Ireland High Quality Seeds: See link below for listener offer.  https://seedsireland.ie/master May can feel like a green light to sow everything, but this year’s real challenge is timing: warm, bright days can turn into near-freezing nights, and that swing can knock seedlings back fast. We talk through how we’re reading those changes in air and ground temperature, why it matters for germination, and how to make calm, sensible decisions in the veg garden and polytunnel rather than racing ahead and paying for it later. From there, we build a practical May sowing list that mixes quick crops with long-range planning. We cover brassicas like cabbage, calabrese and broccoli, including when it makes sense to switch towards winter-focused sowings such as savoy, red cabbage and Brussels sprouts. We also get into reliable staples and small-space favourites, from chard as a one-sow, long-harvest crop to herbs like coriander, parsley and dill, plus the moment basil finally becomes worth sowing once temperatures settle. Succession sowing is the thread that ties it all together: spring onions, spinach, lettuce and mixed salad leaves need a rhythm that speeds up as warmth increases. We also run through root crops like carrots, parsnip, turnips and beetroot, then the warm-season newcomers like courgette, sweetcorn, pumpkin and melon. Finally, we switch to the ornamental garden with what to sow for flowers and colour, including cosmos, cornflower, wildflowers and fast-growing dahlias from seed. If you enjoy practical gardening advice and month-by-month seed sowing guides, subscribe, share the episode with a garden mate, and leave a review so more growers can find the show. Support the show If there is any topic you would like covered in future episodes, please let me know. Email:  info@mastermygarden.com    Check out Master My Garden on the following channels    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mastermygarden/  Instagram @Mastermygarden https://www.instagram.com/mastermygarden/     Until next week   Happy gardening   John

    25 min
  3. 24 APR

    EP327- How To Create A Wildflower Meadow As Part Of A Community Green: Wildflower Meadows Done Right

    This weeks sponsors:  Probio Carbon enriched biochar https://www.probiocarbon.ie Seeds Ireland High Quality Seeds: See link below for listener offer.  https://seedsireland.ie/master A wildflower meadow sounds simple until you try to do it in a housing estate or community green space, where everyone has a different idea of what “nice” looks like. We walk through the real behind-the-scenes work that turns a well-meaning plan into a meadow that lasts, from agreeing the purpose to getting residents, committees, and maintenance teams on the same page. We also clear up one of the biggest sources of confusion: many “wildflower” seed packets are actually short-term floral meadow mixes designed for summer colour. They can be lovely, but they often need re-sowing and won’t build a stable ecosystem. A native Irish wildflower meadow, using Irish provenance seed, behaves differently and gives deeper biodiversity benefits, supporting pollinators, insects, and bird life through nectar, habitat, and seed heads. We talk through what meadows look like outside peak bloom, and how to help people see “untidy” as a sign of life rather than neglect. From there we get practical: choosing a suitable location (especially if it’s shaded or wet), starting from vegetation-free bare ground, and when “No Mow May” can work and when it just produces long grass. We share the best sowing times (September first, May second), ways to improve the look with spring bulbs, and the essential maintenance step of cutting once a year and removing clippings to keep fertility down. If you’re planning a meadow in Ireland, we also point you towards the All-Ireland Pollinator Plan resources and signage that make community buy-in much easier. If this helped, subscribe for more straightforward gardening advice, share it with your local group, and leave a review so more people can find the show. Master My Garden Grow Your Own Wildflower Meadow Online Course:  https://mastermygarden.com/grow-your-own-wildflower-meadow/ If there is any topic you would like covered in future episodes, please let me know. Email:  info@mastermygarden.com    Check out Master My Garden on the following channels    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mastermygarden/  Instagram @Mastermygarden https://www.instagram.com/mastermygarden/     Until next week   Happy gardening   John   Support the show If there is any topic you would like covered in future episodes, please let me know. Email:  info@mastermygarden.com    Check out Master My Garden on the following channels    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mastermygarden/  Instagram @Mastermygarden https://www.instagram.com/mastermygarden/     Until next week   Happy gardening   John

    39 min
  4. 17 APR

    EP326- How To Protect Tender Seedlings In Cold Wet Spring Weather

    Your seedlings look ready, your trays are overflowing, and then spring turns feral: cold rain, sharp wind, hail, even the odd flake of snow. We’ve all been there. If you’re staring at a packed windowsill and wondering whether to plant out or hold back, we walk you through the exact thinking that saves young plants from a miserable setback and keeps the vegetable garden moving forward. We dig into seedling care and young plant protection for unsettled weather, including when it’s genuinely too early to transplant and what to do if you’ve run out of space. We talk about building simple hoop tunnels, when frost fleece works best, and why bionetting or enviromesh can be a game changer by softening the fall of heavy rain and hail while still letting air and moisture through. We also cover hardening off properly, using greenhouse ventilation, outdoor “practice runs”, and cold frames to turn soft indoor growth into tougher plants that cope once they hit the beds. If direct sowing is on your mind, we share practical soil-warming and bed-prep tactics that fit real spring conditions: using black plastic to warm and dry soil, aerating no-dig beds after prolonged wet, and topping with compost to create a reliable seed bed. The big takeaway is patience with timing, but action with preparation, so you’re ready to surge when temperatures finally lift. If this helped, subscribe for more weekly growing advice, share the episode with a fellow gardener, and leave a review so more people can find the podcast. What seedlings are you trying to get through this tricky spell? This weeks sponsors:  Probio Carbon enriched biochar https://www.probiocarbon.ie Seeds Ireland High Quality Seeds: See link below for listener offer.  https://seedsireland.ie/master Support the show If there is any topic you would like covered in future episodes, please let me know. Email:  info@mastermygarden.com    Check out Master My Garden on the following channels    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mastermygarden/  Instagram @Mastermygarden https://www.instagram.com/mastermygarden/     Until next week   Happy gardening   John

    22 min
  5. 15 APR

    EP325 - Podcast Update For Listeners: Sponsorships Are Coming To The Podcast

    We have a big format change coming, and we wanted to tell you before you press play on Friday and hear something new. After running weekly since March 2020 as a fully self-funded passion project, we are accepting sponsorships on the podcast for the first time. It is a step we have considered for years, and we are only doing it now because it feels like the right moment to grow the show in a sustainable way without losing what makes it yours.  Here is what matters most: the sponsors will be aligned with what we talk about and with what you actually do in your garden. You will not hear us promoting something random or irrelevant, and you will not get blasted with jingly, annoying audio that breaks the flow. Any advertising is kept natural, read in our own voice, and chosen to fit the audience and the theme of the podcast.  We also explain the practical side, so there are no surprises. You may occasionally hear pre-roll before the main content, mid-roll during the episode, or post-roll at the end. It will not be on every episode, and it will not change the regular content or the weekly rhythm. If you have been with us for a long time, thank you for the support and trust, it is the reason we can take the next step. If you are new, welcome to Master My Garden. Subscribe, share the podcast with a fellow gardener, and leave a review, it helps more than you think. Support the show If there is any topic you would like covered in future episodes, please let me know. Email:  info@mastermygarden.com    Check out Master My Garden on the following channels    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mastermygarden/  Instagram @Mastermygarden https://www.instagram.com/mastermygarden/     Until next week   Happy gardening   John

    6 min
  6. 10 APR

    EP324 What To Fill My Raised Beds With & Lawn Care Advice Listener Question Answered.

    You can spend a fortune on compost, seed, and clever gear and still end up with tired raised beds and a mossy lawn if you get the basics wrong at the start. We’re answering two listener questions that keep popping up because they sound simple, but the wrong advice can cost you seasons of progress. First up, raised beds in a polytunnel or greenhouse. We dig into the big mistake of putting ground cover fabric or plastic membranes under your growing media. I explain why that layer cuts your beds off from native soil life, why that matters for long term soil health, and what to do instead. We keep it practical: cardboard, quality compost, steady moisture, and keeping beds planted or mulched so the soil food web stays alive. If you’ve already lined beds with plastic, we talk through realistic options to reopen access and start rebuilding. Then we switch to a problem nearly everyone sees after a long wet winter: moss in lawns. We break down the most effective lawn care approach for heavy moss, including scarifying, debris removal, top dressing, and reseeding or overseeding. We also compare slower bacterial treatments, the quick blackening effect of iron sulphate, and why raking is essential. Finally, we touch on how robot mowers can help reduce moss by encouraging thicker grass growth. If you enjoy clear, no nonsense gardening advice for Irish and UK conditions, subscribe, share this with a fellow gardener, and leave a review so more people can find the show. Join me in the garden for the medicinal garden workshop:  https://subscribepage.io/growyourownherbalgarden Support the show If there is any topic you would like covered in future episodes, please let me know. Email:  info@mastermygarden.com    Check out Master My Garden on the following channels    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mastermygarden/  Instagram @Mastermygarden https://www.instagram.com/mastermygarden/     Until next week   Happy gardening   John

    27 min
  7. 3 APR

    EP323- Creating A Cut Flower Garden With Fionnuala Fallon: Grow Better Cut Flowers

    Want to grow your own cut flower garden ? Then this episode is for you.  We’re joined by Fionnuala Fallon, Irish Times garden writer and a flower farmer growing on brilliant soil in County Laois, to unpack what it actually takes to produce beautiful, seasonal wedding flowers without leaning on synthetic chemicals. We chat through the real foundations of sustainable flower farming: protecting soil health, keeping structure intact, and building fertility with local manures, straw mulches, and simple feeds like nettle tea. Fanula shares the practical decisions that helped her get beds established on a budget, including weed suppression and “little dig” cultivation when ground hasn’t been worked for decades. If you love cut flowers and want stronger stems with better vase life, the soil section alone is worth a rewind. Then we get into propagation and seasonality for the Irish climate. You don’t need a polytunnel to raise great seedlings, but you do need light, frost protection, and reliable peat-free seed compost. We also talk about the tight harvesting window for local flowers, how late frosts can hit, and why many growers balance homegrown stems with carefully chosen imports. Along the way we share favourite plants for a home cut flower garden, including hardy shrubs and perennials that are often overlooked, plus practical dahlias advice for wet winters. If you enjoy the chat, subscribe, share it with a fellow gardener, and leave a review so more people can find the show. What’s the one plant you’d grow first for cutting? Support the show If there is any topic you would like covered in future episodes, please let me know. Email:  info@mastermygarden.com    Check out Master My Garden on the following channels    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mastermygarden/  Instagram @Mastermygarden https://www.instagram.com/mastermygarden/     Until next week   Happy gardening   John

    42 min
  8. 27 MAR

    EP322 - What To Sow In April Vegetables, Herbs & Flowers

    March can feel like four seasons in a week, and that’s exactly why an April seed sowing guide is so useful. We sit down with the reality of spring weather swings and turn them into a practical plan: what to sow now under cover, what to hold back until soils warm, and how to stay flexible so you don’t waste seed or stall your garden momentum. We run through a packed “what to sow in April” list for the vegetable garden, starting with reliable salads like lettuce, spring onions, spinach, radish and rocket, then moving into brassicas, peas and beans, and the root crops that start to make sense as beds dry out. We also share timing notes for onions and leeks, the value of multi-sowing, and why fresh parsnip seed matters more than people realise. For warm-season crops like tomatoes, cucumbers, courgettes and squash, we talk about the late-but-still-possible window and the importance of steady warmth. Seedlings don’t love extremes, and we unpack a common spring problem: huge temperature variance in a greenhouse or polytunnel that can leave young plants looking sorry for themselves. You’ll also hear a simple way to keep harvests coming with microgreens, even when outside is still stop-start. On the ornamental side, April is where annual flowers really kick off, with options like cosmos, sunflowers, nasturtiums, cornflowers and nigella, plus a great case for growing dahlias from seed and planting bulbs and tubers for summer colour.  Grow Your Own Herbs Workshop:  We finish with a look at upcoming workshops, including a herb-focused day with Laura Darcy of Yarrow lane Herbs that connects growing with real-world uses like teas and home remedies. https://subscribepage.io/growyourownherbalgarden Subscribe, share this with a gardening friend, and leave a review if the monthly sowing lists help you stay on track. Support the show If there is any topic you would like covered in future episodes, please let me know. Email:  info@mastermygarden.com    Check out Master My Garden on the following channels    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mastermygarden/  Instagram @Mastermygarden https://www.instagram.com/mastermygarden/     Until next week   Happy gardening   John

    25 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Master My Garden podcast with John Jones. The gardening podcast that helps you master your own garden. With new episodes weekly packed full of gardening tips, how to garden guides, interviews with gardening experts on many gardening topics and just about anything that will help you in your garden whether you are a new or a seasoned gardener. I hope you enjoy.John

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