78 episodes

Inspiration to help you garden the organic way, with advice, tips and interviews from the UK's leading organic gardening organisation, Garden Organic. Hosted by Fiona Taylor and Chris Collins.

The Organic Gardening Podcast Garden Organic

    • Leisure
    • 4.6 • 107 Ratings

Inspiration to help you garden the organic way, with advice, tips and interviews from the UK's leading organic gardening organisation, Garden Organic. Hosted by Fiona Taylor and Chris Collins.

    April - How to grow pulses

    April - How to grow pulses

    Chris Collins chats to Josiah Meldrum, co-founder and owner of Hodemedods, about growing beans and pulses in the UK climate.


    Josiah explains how Hodemedods works with British farmers to supply pulses, such as lentils and chickpeas, in as sustainable way as possible and often using organic methods.


    He shares some varieties that can grow well in our gardens and how they grow more unusual crops such as chickpeas and lentils. He also shows how easy it is for British gardeners to overlook the multiple uses of beans.


    “People miss a trick in the UK when it comes to runner beans. We tend to think of them as something you harvest green, but the rest of the world don't do that: they also dry them,” says Josiah. 

    “In Poland, they've got a fantastic tradition of growing and harvesting these delicious white runner bean seeds…and in Greece, you'll have giant ‘Gigantes’. I would encourage everyone to save beans and eat them. The scarlet runners and the white seeded beans are absolutely delicious!”

    Also in this episode…

    Anton reveals how to grow ‘green chickpeas’, and whether it’s worth growing a crop of lentils. From the postbag, he discusses how to deal with moss on vegetable plots, and Chris and Fiona chat about the effects of the wet and windy spring.

    Many thanks to our sponsor Andermatt Garden, which offers high quality environmentally-sustainable products for the home and garden at andermattgarden.co.uk.

    • 1 hr 2 min
    March - The ultimate guide to composting

    March - The ultimate guide to composting

    To celebrate Food Waste Action Week (18-24 March), Chris Collins and David Garrett join Fiona to bust the myths around composting. If you want to know how, why and what to compost this is a must-listen.


    David, our head of knowledge transfer at Garden Organic, shares the reasons he loves compost, and talks through the different composting systems at our organic demonstration garden, and how to use them.


    “We're producing kitchen waste at home so why not process it ourselves and produce compost? It's a circular economy in our own homes,” says David. “We're taking ownership of the waste and not relying on someone else to deal with it for us.”



    Also in this episode…

    Chris and Fiona chat about what to sow and plant now and how to care for winter ponds. 

    • 55 min
    February - The wonders of wetlands

    February - The wonders of wetlands

    Our CEO Fiona Taylor visits Slimbridge to chat to Simon Rose from the  Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust (WWT) about ways to create similar habitats in your growing space. 


    With 75 per cent of wetlands in the UK lost in the last 300 years, Fiona explores the importance of urban bluescapes and bogs as a homes for wildlife.


    “Wetlands are really rich in wildlife – in fact 40 per cent of the world's species are reliant in some way on wetlands,” says Simon, who is Head of Experience Development at the WWT, which is based at Slimbridge Wetlands Centre in Gloucestershire. “But they also help prevent flooding and reduce carbon emissions. Wetlands are actually faster than rainforests at locking up carbon.”

    Simon and Fiona discuss ways you can mimic these diverse habitats in your own growing space.


    “Whenever you introduce water into the garden it's one of the best biodiversity boosters, and that could be anything from a bucket to half a barrel. Dig a hole, fill it with water, put some rocks and some plants in it and I guarantee that within weeks you’ll attract wildlife,” says Simon. “The sediment that settles on the bottom of a pond is another opportunity for carbon sequestration, even in a back garden setting.”



    Also in this episode…

    Chris Collins and Fiona chat about jobs you can be getting with this month, and Anton Rosenfeld delves into the postbag to help answer your questions. This month, they chew over using woodchip as a mulch, how to tackle rats, and ways to save money in the garden.

    • 57 min
    January 2024 - An interview with the Seed Detective

    January 2024 - An interview with the Seed Detective

    Join Fiona Taylor as she chats to Adam Alexander, aka the Seed Detective.

    • 48 min
    December - Bring back the butterflies

    December - Bring back the butterflies

    Our guest this month is Anthony McCluskey from Butterfly Conservation, who shares some fascinating advice about how to support butterflies and caterpillars in your growing space.

    We chat to Butterfly Conservation’s urban butterfly project officer about the importance of attracting more butterflies and nighttime pollinators such as moths. And he provides some brilliant advice on things you can plant and do in your garden to help support pollinator populations.

    “Recent studies show more than 80 per cent of our UK butterfly species are in decline and a lot of our moths are in decline too,” says Anthony, who is based in Stirling. “If you want to boost butterfly numbers locally, you need to pack your garden with ‘caterpillar plants’.”

    Also in this episode…

    Chris, Emma and Fiona take time to reflect on their successes and failures this year, and Emma answers questions from the postbag including how to plant wildlife-friendly hedges, tackle leek moth and improve soil in greenhouses.

    • 54 min
    November - How the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh is tackling climate change

    November - How the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh is tackling climate change

    In this month’s podcast, Chris hops across the border to visit the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh to learn more about its conservation work.

    He chats to Kirsty Wilson, herbaceous supervisor at the botanic gardens, to discover more about its 350-year-old living collection of plants and its research projects.

    Kirsty, a presenter on BBC Scotland’s Beechgrove Garden, explains the steps the garden is taking to help fight climate change, including preserving struggling plants, using green and clean technology and biocontrols for pests. 

    “We're doing a lot of work conserving Scottish native flora, as well as plants that are dying out in the rest of the world,” says Kirsty. “It’s important to understand biodiversity and plant life – and the species that are struggling - so we can protect them…and raise awareness with governments.”

    Also in this episode…

    Chris and Fiona discuss the benefits of not being too tidy in the garden, and planting whips for hedging. From the postbag, we offer advice on what to do after tomato blight, ways to tackle invasive weeds and allium leaf miner.

    • 48 min

Customer Reviews

4.6 out of 5
107 Ratings

107 Ratings

WhyAreAllTheGooUsernamesTaken? ,

Useful and Fun

Really handy seasonal tips from personable and knowledgeable experts that are a joy to listen to. It is sometimes difficult to find garden advice that really focuses on the organic approach rather than presenting it as a nice, but optional, extra. So glad I found this podcast to help me do a bit more for the planet, wildlife and the best tasting veggies.

Simon RD ,

Love it

As a newbie, I love this podcast as a source of knowledge. Really accessible (they use phrases like ‘growing space’ instead of garden and have just as many useful tips for those who ‘garden’ with window boxes) and helpful. Thanks!

the big fly in ,

All about honeybees

Hello. I would love to be interviewed on your podcast. I make sell and promote a rather unique product and system of beekeeping. Now with over 1500 sold in the last few years. It’s no longer a total novelty. My mantra is : bees for bees sake. I believe in a better more gentle way to keep or at least host honeybees. With my low stress I have less problems well no problems with bee. All the problems beekeepers have with veroa and efb and and and. I don’t have. Now that’s very interesting. But what is also interesting is the way I harvest honey. It totally unique to me and my system. Never been done before or by anyone. And that’s unbelievable because everything has been done in beekeeping, or has it? But what is even more remarkable is this is the only system that conforms with every permaculture and forest gardening ethic!! Ok I’ll stop there. But it makes for a great conversation, if you agree with me or not. Hope to hear from you soon Kevin the Gardenersbeehive Guy

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