79 episodi

Chris Day and Peter Brown from Buckingham Garden Centre talk about their gardening experiences, what to do in the garden, seasonal gardening advice and interviews with horticultural experts.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Dig It - Discussions on Gardening Topics Dig It

    • Tempo libero

Chris Day and Peter Brown from Buckingham Garden Centre talk about their gardening experiences, what to do in the garden, seasonal gardening advice and interviews with horticultural experts.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    June '24 in the Garden

    June '24 in the Garden

    June is here and with it brings the sun and fun in the garden! In this month’s Dig It, Peter Brown and Chris Day discuss the latest gardening news stories, events, and those all-important gardening tasks, plus celebrating DIG IT’s inclusion into the Rephonic top 15 gardening podcasts!
    What’s On
    3 - 9th June British Flowers Week celebrating the variety and skills of the nation’s flower growers.
    8th June: Royal Windsor Flower Show in Windsor Great Park, Windsor.
    8 - 9th June: London Open Gardens event.
    13 - 16th June: BBC Gardeners' World Live at the NEC in Birmingham.
    21st - 23rd June; Blenheim Palace Flower Show, Oxfordshire.
    People, gardens, products and plants mentioned. Tom Stuart Smith, Val Bourne, Jonathan Sheppard - Cosmos National Collection and Dame Judi Dench plants the Sycamore gap seedling. Water Aid Garden, Octavia Hill Community Garden with the National Trust. The RHS No Adults Allowed Garden, Malvern Garden Houseplant Studios, Hanley Open Side Building from Malvern, and Taylors Bulbs win their 31st Gold medal.
    Miracle Gro, Tomorite Tomato Feed, Enviromesh or garlic spray to deter carrot fly. Slug copper tape, Slug Gone, beer traps and coffee grounds.
    Euonymus Green Spire and Euonymus Jean Hugues (good box alternative). Rose ‘Emma Bridgewater’ from David Austin and the ‘With Courage’ from Peter Beales.
    Make direct sowings of Peas, Beans, Courgettes, Sweetcorn, Lettuce, Carrot, Spring Onions, Radish and flowers Nasturtiums, cornflowers, and calendulas.
    News
    Winner of the RHS Plant of the Year Prunus ‘Starlight’. Runner up: Cosmos ‘Cherry Chocolate’.
    Bromeliads cultivated at Walton Hall in Cheshire.
    Growing plants should be on the curriculum.
    Kew ‘Carbon’ Garden created.
    Scientists eavesdrop the sounds from the soil.
    Long grass is benefiting butterflies says charity.
    RHS Garden Wisley opens Oakwood Summerhouse to pay homage to Ellen Willmott.
    National Trust revamps some gardens by future proofing with more resilient planting.
    Aviva issues flood risk warning as residents turn to artificial lawns.
    Jekka McVicar recipient of the Prince Edward Award.
    Oudolf landscape opens at Wisley.
    Lack of collective of nouns of trees.
    Auckland gardens regeneration in County Durham.
    Roses at risk from lack of genetic diversity.
    A UK first Tulbaghia National Collection at Eastwood Park Prison.
    25 years of research creates UK first for oak seeds.
    King Charles III to continue as Patron of the National Garden Scheme, and is the new patron of the RHS.
    Top 5 bedding plants 1 Geranium Zonal Mixed 9-pack, 2 Geranium Zonal, 13cm, 3 Hedera (ivy) Mixed, 9cm, 4 Geranium Ivy Leaf Mixed and at 5 Petunia Mixed carry pack.
    In our next podcast we chat with Jessica Naish from Buckingham Flower Farm about the growing cut flowers.
    Our thanks to Chiltern Music Therapy for supplying the music.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 56 min
    Huw Richards, Growing the Self Sufficiency Garden

    Huw Richards, Growing the Self Sufficiency Garden

    In this episode of Dig It Peter Brown and Chris Day chat with Huw Richards. Huw’s mission is simple - to help as many people as possible to grow their own food. He documents his productive garden through his hugely popular YouTube Channel. He’s just published a new book with Sam Cooper, The Self-Sufficiency Garden book, which focuses on the growing and cooking side of grow your own.
    Plants mentioned: Apples, Asparagus, Basil, Basil Mint, Beetroot, Beans, Blackcurrants, Carrots, Comfrey and Nettle Tea, Courgettes, Garlic, Gooseberries, Garden peas, Leeks, Nasturtiums, Onions, Pea shoots, Padron Peppers, Potatoes, Runner beans, Spring Cabbage, Sweetcorn, Squash, Tomatoes and Turnips.
    Products mentioned: BBQs, Chickens (for eggs and manure), Firepit, Raised beds, James Wong’s Grow Your Own Drugs: Easy Recipes for Natural Remedies and Beauty Treats book and Water Butts. Making Jadam Liquid Fertiliser video.
    Desert Island essentials: A Swiss army pocket knife and maybe practise the new art of ‘sand gardening’!
    Horticultural heroes: Huw’s Dad has been a major influence, who was in turn influenced by the hit BBC TV comedy The Good Life, No-Dig guru Charles Dowding, John Seymour, Percy Thrower, and James Wong.
    Follow Huw on Instagram @huwsgarden
    Follow Sam Cooper on Instagram @chef.sam.black
    Huw Richards YouTube Channel
    Huw has written four books with DK: Veg in One Bed (2019), Grow Food For Free (2020), The Vegetable Grower’s Handbook (2022) and The Self-Sufficiency Garden, written with good friend and colleague Sam Copper (2024).
    Our thanks to Chiltern Music Therapy for supplying the music.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 53 min
    May '24 in the Garden

    May '24 in the Garden

    May is the month our beds, allotments and containers explode with colour and energy.
    What’s on
    3rd - 4th May Toby’s Garden Festival at Powderham Castle, Kenton.
    3rd - 5th May BBC Gardeners’ World Spring Fair at the National Motor Museum, Beaulieu.
    9 – 12th May RHS Malvern Spring Festival, Three Counties Showground, Malvern.
    12th May Borde Hill Specialist Spring Plant Fair, Haywards Heath.
    17th - 26th May Floralies Internationales, Vendee, France.
    20th May World Bee Day
    21st - 25th May RHS Chelsea Flower Show.
    25th - 28th May Blenheim Palace Flower Show
    25th May - 2nd June National Children’s Gardening Week will again be partnering with THE WORLD OF PETER RABBIT™ this May half term.
    30th May - 3rd June Bloom at the Visitors Centre, Phoenix Park, Dublin.
    Plants mentioned: Aquatics - water lilies, marginals and oxygenators can be established now. Camellias, Cauliflowers, Cherries, Cucumbers, Chili peppers, Courgette, Daffodils, Dahlias, ‘Enorma’ Runner Beans, French bean ‘Cobra’, Forsythia, Gooseberries, Helenium, Hosta, Iris, Kale, Malus (crab apples), ‘Padron’ Pepper, Potatoes, Roses, Sedum, Sweet peas, Sunflowers, Sweet Corn and Tulips.
    Products mentioned: Fertilisers – Doff, Growmore and Tomorite, Tea for soaking bean seeds and Speedplanters.
    This month’s Dig It Top 5: Most popular liquid feeds
    News
    Climate change and verticillium wilt puts brewers hops under threat.
    Kew scientists assess extinction risk of flowering species using computer modelling
    Readers to the trade magazine Horticulture Week voted for Alan Titchmarsh and bagged compost as the most influential person and product impacting the gardening world over the past 50 years.
    A major revamp of Torbay’s 100-year-old Italian garden brings 1,600 new plants after 40 cabbage palms were felled.
    Yorkshire base, fourth generation rhubarb grower @ehubarbrobert is a social media hit.
    An OBE for garden designer and landscape architect Tom Stuart-Smith. The RHS have awarded Neil Lucas of Knoll Gardens and Nurseryman Chris Young the prestigious Victoria Medal of Honour (VMH). The Elizabeth Medal of Honour was bestowed on non-dig guru Charles Dowding for his outstanding contribution to horticulture as a non-professional gardener.
    New initiative to revive railway hedges.
    Latest DNA fingerprinting could help identify lost apples that are resistant to climate change.
    International Women’s Day: 100+ Leading Women in Horticulture 2024 announced.
    University of Sussex launches The Big Bee Hotel experiment to discover more about bees that nest in artificially created habitats.
    New Tulip variety named after King Charles III unveiled at Keukenhof.
    Garden Organics says the Government isn’t moving fast enough on the peat ban.
    RHS Chelsea Flower Show gardens go through ‘green audit’ for the first time.
    £12million Lottery Heritage Fund to restore Great Yarmouth’s historic winter gardens, the last surviving Victorian ironwork glasshouse on a seaside promenade.
    London’s Royal Parks have openings for ten apprentices.
    Weather causes concern with potato farmers.
    Discover how to take part in this year’s Henchman Topiary awards.
    Gardens start to bounce back visitor numbers wise with Kew Garden and RHS Wisley and the Royal Botanic Garden at Edinburgh taking the top spots.
    Our thanks to Chiltern Music Therapy for supplying the music.

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    • 1h
    Uncovering the legacy of Stowe Gardens with Head Gardener Barry Smith

    Uncovering the legacy of Stowe Gardens with Head Gardener Barry Smith

    In this edition of Dig It, Peter Brown and Chris Day chat with Barry Smith, Head Gardener at the National Trust’s Stowe Landscape Gardens, near Buckingham. Barry has been at Stowe for over 40 years and head gardener for over 25 so he knows this garden with immense passion and understanding. Stowe, a world-famous 18th century garden was created by such luminaries as Charles Bridgeman, William Kent and Lancelot ‘Capability’ Brown. For over 300 years these spectacular gardens have been welcoming tourists far and wide.
    Plants mentioned: Roses, annuals (bedding), Ash (Fraxinus excelsior), Pinus (pine), Honeysuckle, wildflowers, Snake’s head Fritillary (featured in Barry’s funny story), Lime, Beech, English Elm and Dutch Elm resistant varieties and Snowdrops (Galanthus).
    The Gardens Trust, National Trust and the Buckinghamshire Gardens Trust (for networking, sharing knowledge and celebrating success stories locally and beyond).
    Barry’s top two favourite gardens: Stourhead Gardens near Mere, Wiltshire and Stackpole, near Pembroke, Pembrokeshire, Wales.
    Monuments, specific areas and statues mentioned at Stowe. Grecian Valley Ha-Ha, Oxford Water Lake, Lamport Garden (on-going project), Temple of Concord and Victory (Grecian Temple), Stowe School, The New Inn (old coaching house), Grand Avenue approach to the Corinthian Arch, Buckingham Parish Church, Marble Arch, and The Ice House.
    Stowe gardens and school have been used for many film locations including The Crown, Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade, Slaughterhouse Rulez, Stardust and in the James Bond film The World is Not Enough.
    Barry’s Desert Island luxuries Felco secateurs and a Tulip tree (Liriodendron tulipifera).
    To find out more about Stowe Landscape gardens click on this link and maybe become a volunteer.
    Our thanks to Chiltern Music Therapy for supplying the music.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 57 min
    April '24 in the Garden

    April '24 in the Garden

    Many of our gardens are enjoying much earlier blooms this spring due to the mild and damp weather conditions. Peter Brown and Chris Day bring us the latest gardening news, what’s on’s and topical gardening advice for the busy month of April.
    What’s on
    6th -7th April: Cornwall Garden Society Spring Flower Show at Royal Cornwall Show Ground near Wadebridge, features a Grow Your Own space and Tipi Talks as well as dazzling displays and exquisite exhibits.
    Saturday 13th April: Hanami Blossom Day at Brogdale Farm, Faversham, Kent. Open 10am-3pm. Discover Japanese art and culture amidst the breathtaking blossoming orchards, plus so much more.
    15th – 28th April: A celebration of Spring: from blossom to bluebells at Hever Castle Gardens in Kent.
    18th - 21st April: RHS Urban Show set in the heart of Manchester (Depot Mayfield), celebrates your own oasis in this new immersive gardening experience.
    Sunday 21st April: Plant Fairs Roadshow at Arundel Castle in West Sussex. Open 10am-5pm. Expert nurseries will be displaying their plants in the grounds of Arundel Castle as part of the Plant Fairs Roadshow.
    Monday 29th April: Rachel de Thame: A Flower Garden for Pollinators talk at the Garden Museum in Lambeth, London, by Rachel de Thame and botanical artist Lauren Lusk yours about her new book.
    Plants mentioned: Comfrey (for tea), Hebe, Narcissi, Muscari (grape hyacinths), Tulips, Hydrangea ‘Cherry Explosion,’ Rose ‘Munstead Wood’, Magnolia ‘Stellata’ (Star magnolia), Primulas and Polyanthus.
    Seeds to sow: Cosmos, Cowslips, Gazanias, Geraniums, Marigolds, Nasturtium, Sunflowers and wildflowers. Veggies: Parsnips, Carrots, and salad crops.
    Products mentioned: Lawn seed mixtures including Johnsons Any Time, Tuff Lawn, Shade and Meadow wildflower mixture, feed Vitax Q4, Empathy Afterplant, Sulphate of Potash, Fungus Fighter for preventative box treatment. Box alternatives - Euonymus ‘Jean Hugues’ and E. ‘Green Spire’, Evergreen honeysuckle hedging. Flowering hedges including Lavender and Hedge Germander. Garden hoe. Water retaining gel, Vitax Q4 and continuous (slow release) control fertiliser.
    Peter and Chris’s bluebell wood recommendations: Hazelborough Woods (Silverstone, Northamptonshire) and The Woodland Trust’s College Wood (Nash, Milton Keynes).
    News
    101 Charles Darwin lookalikes gather at threatened 550-year-old oak tree in record attempt protest.
    Global tree of the year winners announced.
    Sycamore gap tree update
    Californian Redwoods make it big in the UK
    Government dashes hopes for horticulture with underwhelming reforms
    More Scottish gardens open under the SGS to help the Perennial charity.
    Finalist of the RHS Britain in Bloom competition announced.
    International Orchid Show moves to Gardeners’ World Live.
    Glow-in-the-dark Petunia ‘Firefly’ launched in the United States.
    A new Rose ‘With Courage’ in conjunction with RNLI from rose breeder Peter Beales.
    A change in shift of food production with wider diversification of crops.
    The NHS could save £6.7 billion a year if everyone ate plant based food.
    New Backyard Biodiversity Report from Garden Organics.
    Top RHS plant diseases ranked from results in 2023.
    Dig It Top 5: This month Grass seed best sellers.
    Our thanks to Chiltern Music Therapy for supplying the music.

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    • 55 min
    For the love of Chillies, with Jason Breed

    For the love of Chillies, with Jason Breed

    The temperature rises in this edition of Dig It as Peter Brown and Chris Day chat with passionate chilli grower Jason Breed. Jason, a seed specialist from Moles Seeds, gives a full rundown of the growing of these popular fiery fruits, a look at what makes chillies so hot, plus some insightful advice on getting the best from your plants and using them in the kitchen.
     
    Chilli peppers are varieties of the berry-fruit of plants from the genus Capsicum, which are members of the nightshade family Solanaceae, cultivated for their pungency. Chilli peppers are widely used in many cuisines as a spice to add ‘heat’ to dishes. There are many health benefits associated with chillies too.
     
    The Scoville Scale is a measurement of pungency (spiciness or ‘heat’).
     
    Jason famously created a Chocolate Chip Chilli Cookie featuring Habanero chillies at the Garden Centre.
     
    Products mentioned: Products derived from chillies including sprays for bears, elephants (using barriers of chilli plants) and as an effective squirrel deterrent. Use Vermiculite at seed sowing time. Use a decent seed and cutting peat-free compost such as Levington’s. LED plant lights to help growth. Hydroponic systems lend themselves to chilli production. Use Organic contact sprays for caterpillars, greenflies, flea beetles, sawflies and whitefly control. Fertilisers including Chilli Focus Premium Liquid Concentrated Fertiliser.
     
    Chilli varieties mentioned: ‘Apache’, ‘Quick Fire’ (30k on the Scoville scale), F1 hybrid, is the fastest maturing chilli available from seed with the prolific fiery red fruits produced in as little as 50 days from sowing. ‘Red Air’ (Bird’s eye type, Scoville Scale 70-80k), ‘Red Flame’ (Cayenne type, 30-50k), ‘Rocky’, a Jalapeno hybrid, 8k and ‘Santana’ (hybrid Anaheim, 2.5-3.5k).
    Open pollinated types include Scotch Bonnet, Habanero and Tabasco, where seeds can be successfully saved from these plants.
     
    Guinness World Records declares Pepper X as world’s new hottest chili pepper.
     
    A garden axe would be Jason’s essential castaway item.
     
    The latest Guinness World Chilli eating record.
     
    Useful links
    Chillies available from the Garden Centre including Padron Chilli Pepper and De Cayenne, South Devon Chilli Farm and Chilli Ranch. Jason also mentioned a Bedfordshire commercial chilli grower.
     
    Our thanks to Chiltern Music Therapy for supplying the music.

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    • 58 min

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