Customer trial panel member profile – Caroline Broome

We’d like to introduce you to some members of our customer trial panel – our trusty team of gardeners who test Thompson & Morgan’s plants in real gardens. They’ll be writing blog posts for us in the next few months to give you updates on what’s happening in their gardens. First up is Caroline Broome, who has been growing plants for our trials for 4 years.

Customer trial panel member Caroline Broome

Caroline Broome

I have been gardening since my 30s, for about 20 years, from a very small cottage garden 27ft x 12ft to our current garden 75ft x 30ft. I passed the RHS General Certificate about 15 yrs ago as an enthusiastic amateur and having built on that knowledge developed my garden to the point of opening it annually for the NGS for the last 4 yrs. We have a large patio with an assortment of pots and tubs, a small lawn (getting smaller) with curved herbaceous borders, a circular pond and rill surrounding a border featuring tall perennials and grasses, all leading to a shaded enclave full of ferns and woodland plants, a greenhouse and a summer house at the back. As our garden is surrounded by mature trees over 50% is shady so last year we took on a sun soaked allotment to grow fruits, veg and flowers for cutting. Both our garden & allotment sit on typical London clay which we are constantly improving; while the garden is very sheltered from the elements, the allotment is on the brow of a hill, exposed to strong winds, and floods in one corner, so we always strive to rise to these challenges.

I am the plantsperson and my husband is the hard landscaper. We love to experiment and inject humour and innovation into our garden. David installed a Magic Tap in the pond which is always a major talking point on Open Days, and I love to create unusual planting combinations with perennials that I hunt out at specialist plant fairs and nurseries. The patio in summer is a mass of climbers & trailing plants, colourful hanging baskets and bold exotics and  in winter is more subtle relying on evergreen forms and textures.

Trialling Thompson & Morgan products & plants has encouraged me to be more adventurous and broadened my skill base, and introduced me to vegetable growing, seed sowing and year round bulb planting. I look forward to sending in my progress reports throughout the season, and even after 4 years, am still apt to report on previous year’s trial plants! I also contribute to Garden News as part of their amateur gardening team on a monthly basis.

Find out more about our customer trial panel and how to join the team here.

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Grow your own – it’s not too late

Grow your own – it’s not too late!

Grow your own - it's not too late

Sow petunias under glass now

Spring may be late this year, but there is still plenty of time to grow your own. In fact, waiting and sowing later when the soil and weather conditions are better means that your seeds will germinate more successfully than in cold wet soil.

With many gardeners wondering how they’re going to get the best from their gardens with such a late start to the season, we asked Sue Sanderson for her expert advice. Here’s what she said:

If the soil is warm enough and the weather conditions are favourable, you can sow hardy annuals direct outside from April, right through to the 1st week of June. If you’re really desperate to get germination underway, you could sow seeds into cell trays under cover and plant them out once the conditions outside improve. There is plenty of time, so don’t panic!

Petunias, ipomoea, nicotiana, dahlia, ageratum, lobelia and sunflowers can be sown up to mid April under glass.

Grow your own - it's not too late

Sow tomato seeds now

Marigolds, zinnias, cosmos and tagetes are the last half-hardy annuals you would sow – these can be sown under glass from April through to early May.

Sow tomatoes and aubergines up to the 3rd week of April.

It’s getting a little late to sow peppers – you’ve only really got until the end of the 2nd week of April to get them going.

Summer brassicas should be sown by now for early harvests, but late summer early autumn harvesting varieties can be sown up to early May.

Wait until the soil has warmed up to sow other vegetable seeds – you’re more likely to get a better crop.

Grow your own - it's not too late

Plant potatoes until mid May

Potatoes, especially maincrops, can be planted up until mid May.

You can give your soil a helping hand in warming with cloches and polytunnels. These will also protect your crops while they’re growing.

So don’t despair, you’ve still got time to create a fabulous display of flowers and grow a decent crop of vegetables to see you through the year.

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