Skip to content
The Grove Playtown Wembley Coming Soon...

Language

News

Top 15 gardening tips for June

by Joshua Novell 01 Jun 2025
Top 15 gardening tips for June

Summer’s here and it’s the best time of year to be out in the garden, with flowers blooming, bees buzzing and long days to enjoy it all! Keep your garden looking fabulous this summer with our top 15 gardening tips for June.

  1. Fill pots and hanging baskets with summer bedding for fantastic colour that lasts for months. Trailing geraniums, petunias and lobelia love sunny spots and busy lizzies and begonias are great for shade. Feed fortnightly with a high potash feed for maximum flowering.
  2. Harden off and plant out runner beans, French beans, squash, courgettes and tomatoes.
  3. Keep on sowing salad leaves, beetroot and carrots to give you a supply all through summer.
  4. First early potatoes should be ready to harvest this month. Dig up one or two first to check how big they are, and if they’re too small, let them grow on for a few more weeks.
  5. Feed tomatoes fortnightly with a high potash feed to encourage fruit development. Container grown vegetables like dwarf beans and courgettes will also benefit from a fortnightly high potash feed – tomato feed works for them all!
  6. Harvest garlic and onion once the leaves turn yellow and start to flop over.
  7. Net strawberries as they start to ripen so that the birds don’t get to them before you can enjoy them.
  8. Deadhead repeat-flowering roses and pick sweet peas regularly so that they will keep on flowering all summer.
  9. Once hardy geraniums have finished flowering, cut them back to promote a flush of new foliage and flowers.
  10. Mow the lawn regularly, but in long spells of dry weather, mow less often and on a higher blade setting to reduce stress on the grass. If you have space, leave an area of lawn uncut to provide a home for insects and other garden wildlife.
  11. Weeds grow fast in summer, so keep them under control. On dry days, run a Dutch hoe over the soil to cut down annual weeds like spurge, chickweed and hairy bittercress, and leave the weeds on the soil to wither.
  12. Give Wisteria its summer prune, cutting back all this year’s long whippy shoots to around 20cm long.
  13. Trim evergreen hedges to keep them neat, but always check first to make sure you aren’t disturbing any nesting birds.
  14. Prune summer-flowering shrubs like Philadelphus (mock orange), Weigela and Forsythia once they’ve finished flowering, cutting back the flowered shoots to strong buds lower down and removing one in every 3-4 old stems to encourage new growth.
  15. Water in the early mornings or evenings to reduce water loss through evaporation, and install waterbutts to conserve rainwater for use on the garden.

 

Whether you’re planting, weeding or simply relaxing in a deck chair, you’ll find everything you need in our centre, so pay us a visit soon!

Prev post
Next post

Thanks for subscribing!

This email has been registered!

Shop the look

Choose options

Recently viewed

Edit option
Back In Stock Notification
Terms & conditions
What is Lorem Ipsum? Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry's standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown printer took a galley of type and scrambled it to make a type specimen book. It has survived not only five centuries, but also the leap into electronic typesetting, remaining essentially unchanged. It was popularised in the 1960s with the release of Letraset sheets containing Lorem Ipsum passages, and more recently with desktop publishing software like Aldus PageMaker including versions of Lorem Ipsum. Why do we use it? It is a long established fact that a reader will be distracted by the readable content of a page when looking at its layout. The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters, as opposed to using 'Content here, content here', making it look like readable English. Many desktop publishing packages and web page editors now use Lorem Ipsum as their default model text, and a search for 'lorem ipsum' will uncover many web sites still in their infancy. Various versions have evolved over the years, sometimes by accident, sometimes on purpose (injected humour and the like).

Choose options

this is just a warning
Login
Shopping cart
0 items