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BBC Gardeners’ World Magazine
February 2025
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Other Articles in this Issue


Editorial
Dear subscriber
Subscriber CLUB PHOTOS: GETTY/GEORGIA COURT; JASON INGRAM Enjoy
We love...
We love February
Whose silly idea was it to have Valentine’s Day in February? Surely it would be more appropriate to have it in May? Or June? Or, frankly, any other month apart from this short and bleak four weeks in winter? I suppose there are arguments for the romance of a log fire and some snuggling under soft blankets, but I reckon that most gardeners feel at their friskiest when there are leaves bursting from trees and shoots peeking from borders. Still, we have what we have, so not only do We Love February but February loves us back by giving us just the chastest kiss of colour.
Expert’s choice Crocuses
Bringing a welcome splash of colour this month, these popular bulbs may not be quite what you think, as Graham Rice explains
Gardeners’ World Offer
*Just pay £5.95 postage FREE* 24 summer bedding
The Full Monty
Change is afoot in the Jewel Garden as Monty reveals why it’s time to rethink the iconic heart of Longmeadow and how he’s going about it
Over the fence
Can you ever have too many house plants?
Digging deeper
Putting the spotlight on the biggest issues in gardening today
Gardeners’ World offer
SAVE £100pp WITH CODE GW100 Discover Lake Como,
2 for 1 Gardens Snowdrop spectacular
Celebrate the coming of spring as we visit some of the snowdrop-studded sites that you can visit for less with your 2 for 1 Gardens entry card
Container of the month
Nestle rosy hellebores among a cosy layer of evergreen foliage to create this heart-warming shady pot display
Subscriber CLUB BENEFITS
Offer of the month Raspberry ‘Glen Ample’ Raspberry
Be inspired
Sowing for success
Start your growing year on the right footing with Monty’s timely guide to sowing a garden full of colour and flavour
Soak up the atmosphere
Having tranformed a bland suburban plot into a romantic, relaxing oasis, Sunil Patel has opened his garden for charity over the past two summers, and now invites us to take a look around…
Garden globetrotting: Seville
With the cross-cultural architecture of its buildings and the gardens’ diverse planting, the Real Alcázar de Sevilla has so much to offer visitors that Matt Collins has to resort to his diary to recall its every detail
Inspired by Alcázar
Bring the essence of Alcázar home by adopting its plants, ethos and style
Mini chainsaws
Take the strain out of pruning trees and shrubs with a handy, battery-powered, mini chainsaw. Harry Duncton puts six products to the test to see if they make the cut
Mini chainsaws explained
Bar Acts as the guide for the cutting
Webb Eco WEV20PSB2 Cordless Pruning Saw Trimmer
SCORE: 18/20
WORX WG324E Cordless Compact Chainsaw
£129.99 Weight 1.7kg Bar length 12cm
Bosch EasyChain 18V-15-7 Cordless Chainsaw
£198 Weight 1.7kg Bar length 15cm
Stihl GTA 26 Cordless Garden Pruner
BEST BUY £149 Weight 1.7kg Bar length
Greenworks 24V Mini Chainsaw
£139.99 Weight 1.7kg Bar length 10cm
Husqvarna Aspire™ P5-P4A
BEST BUY £169.99 Weight 1.3kg Bar length
How to use a mini chainsaw
Make sure your work area is clear of
How to look after a mini chainsaw
Always remove the battery before you work on
Best mini chainsaw
Stihl GTA 26 Cordless Garden Pruner
Best mini chainsaw for versatility
Husqvarna Aspire™ P5-P4A
Best budget mini chainsaw
Webb Eco WEV20PSB2 Cordless Pruning Saw
Do it now
Hardwood cuttings made easy
Making free plants doesn’t get any simpler than with hardwood cuttings, and now is the perfect time to give it a go. Alan Titchmarsh shows you how
Make the most of your kitchen garden
Getting out into the garden in winter, even for short spells, keeps things ticking over, especially fruit and veg crops, as Adam Frost explains
Make moments matter
A small kitchen garden doesn’t need a lot of attention at this time of year, but there are several quick and enjoyable jobs you can be doing now to keep things moving
Potting on a winter show
PART 3
Create your container
Position your pot in a sheltered spot, where you can easily enjoy its colourful display from indoors
Protecting potted plants
These simple tips will help keep your containers looking their best throughout cold snaps
DIY garden projects
PART THREE
Travel
British Isles garden cruise
Exclusive onboard events
Luxury 5-star river cruises
8 days from £1,599pp, June-October 2025 and April-October 2026 departures Salzburg
Wildlife
Act now for wildlife
Gardeners across the UK have been stepping up to support wildlife and combat related issues such as climate change. GW Wildlife Editor Kate Bradbury reveals the results of this year’s review, celebrating successes and exploring how we can all help
Plants
Easy-going erysimums
SAVE £18 when you buy 3
SAVE 15% ON THE BRAND NEW SUMMER RANGE
DISCOVER 200+ NEW VARIETIES
FREE* TOMATO GROWERS’ SAVER COLLECTION
10 Postiplugs WORTH £20.97
Quality bedding collections
Fill your garden with colour from spring through to autumn with these three vibrant bedding collections. Pot up the plug plants on arrival and keep indoors until after the last frost, then plant in beds, containers and hanging baskets.
3 FOR 2 ON WILDFLOWERS
Greater knapweed Salad burnet Bird’s foot trefoil Ox-eye
Cactus dahlias collection
Dahlia ‘Yellow Star’ SAVE NEARLY £30 Dahlia
Patio potato selection
SAVE £17 ‘Charlotte’ ‘Desiree’ ‘Rocket’ These specially selected
ON TEST
How to choose a mini chainsaw
If you’re thinking of buying a mini chainsaw, consider the following points first
Grow & Eat
Growing THE GOOD LIFE
Join urban smallholder Sara Ward as she begins the month with a few key jobs for the year ahead
Sweet pickings
What are the best cordon cherry tomatoes to grow? Lucy Chamberlain tested a dozen varieties to find the sweetest, juiciest and heaviest cropping options for the season ahead
Month-by-month guide
Sow cherry tomatoes soon for sweet, fruitful harvests from July until October
Little wonders
Short on space? Cordon cherry tomatoes are the perfect vertical veg crop
city smallholding
FEBRUARY Jobs
ABOVE The soil in raised beds drains better
BBC Gardeners’ World
WHAT TO DO NOW
50 things to do this month from the Gardeners’ World team
50 things to do this month
Cut back deciduous grasses
Deciduous grasses need cutting back to make room
30 MINUTES TO SPARE
Cut buddleia plants back hard now, 10cm from
Maintain feeders
Take bird cleaners indoors for a good wash
STEP BY STEP
Create a winter habitat for bugs
Cut back cornus stems
Hard pruning now gives cornus plants plenty of
Last chance to prune hedges
It’s safer to use loppers than a ladder
Don’t forget
■ Order bedding plug plants from specialist suppliers
Cover borderline-hardy plants
Check the weather forecast and cover up any
Edge lawns
Improve the whole look of the garden by
Repot ailing house plants
It can help to use a spoon to
Trim back ivy
Trim back overlong shoots to keep growth under
STEP BY STEP
How to prune roses
Look out for bulbs in lawns
Keep off areas of grass planted with bulbs,
30 MINUTES TO SPARE
Once the flowers of forced hyacinths have faded,
Don’t forget
■ Sow hardy annuals in modules or pots
Plant camellias
Plant a camellia in a large pot for
Add pops of colour to patio pots
If your containers have lost their sparkle, revive
STEP BY STEP
Divide geraniums
Sow your FREE seeds
This month, subscribers receive a FREE pack of
STEP BY STEP Potting up aloe offsets
With light levels increasing and plants beginning to
STEP BY STEP Refresh fruit bush compost
Replenish the compost of fruit bushes grown permanently
YOUR PRUNING MONTH
February is a great time to prune many garden plants, from herbaceous perennials to holly topiary, says Frances Tophill
Rejuvenating neglected holly topiary
Beware of holly’s prickly leaves when pruning Holly
Holly
NEXT MONTH Look out for our new pruning
50 things to do this month
Check max/min thermometers
Reading and recording temperature trends helps you protect
Pot up mint for early pickings
Mint roots are incredibly tough and will grow
Pinch out chrysanths
Pinching out is best repeated several times through
STEP BY STEP Pot up cannas
Bring cannas into early growth by potting TOP
Start harvesting cavolo nero
When harvesting cavolo nero, work around the plant,
30 MINUTES TO SPARE
Apply organic fertilisers, such as well-rotted manure or
Last chance to prune apples
Remove any unproductive or old apple tree branches
Tidy up herbs
Cut out old stems at ground level to
Chit seed potatoes now
Choose a cold, dry place, such as an
Look for old fruits and remove
Check your trees for old fruits and remove
Plant a bare-root fruit tree
Espaliers make great use of available space, especially
STEP BY STEP Planting a bare-root fruit tree
1 DIG a square hole just before
Q&A
Vine weevil
Your questions answered
GQT Gardeners’ Question Time
Our experts tackle your queries, which include a sad-looking pineapple, some leggy seedlings and a horde of hungry squirrels
Last Words
Crossword
Put down your trowel, pick up a pen and exercise those brain muscles instead…
How to get in touch
Please contact us online in the first instance
Marketplace Travel Directory
Creekside Cottages in Cornwall Dreaming about a Cornish
Marketplace Product Directory
Fabulous Bespoke Glass Rooms & Verandas Use Code
THE TV SHOW IS BACK SO GET GROWING WITH US!
March issue on sale 13 February
Tales from Titchmarsh
Spring is just around the corner, and there is no better time to be alive. Just make sure you take a moment to enjoy it, says Alan
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