
Five ways to ensure your potted plants thrive while you're on holiday
This is due to the fear that their vibrant displays will simply wither and die while they are away on their annual summer holidays.
However, there are effective strategies to minimise damage and ensure you don't return to a desolate collection of dead plants.
Here, some garden experts reveal their top tips to keeping your planted blooms, blooming - even if you are away.
Call on friends and family
An obvious one, but often the best solution is to get a neighbour, friends and family to pop over to water the plants, particularly those in pots and hanging baskets, on a daily basis in your absence.
In return, offer to water their garden when they are away, or at least bring them a gift back from your holidays to show your appreciation.
If you are relying on others to do your watering, make it as easy as possible for them, by positioning as many containers together as you can and leaving the hosepipe or watering can in easy reach to make the job as simple as possible.
If they are not familiar with watering, give them a little guidance on watering at the base of the plants, not on the leaves, so the plants are getting the moisture that they need, and giving them a thorough soaking until the water starts seeping through the bottom of the pot.
Container plants and newly planted specimens are likely to be the most vulnerable in your absence, while the root systems of established border plants will have gone deeper and wider into the ground to find moisture.
So, huddle your pots of bedding plants together in a cool, shady spot, the RHS advises, or if you can't move them, use a shade cloth to protect them from the sun.
If you don't have natural shade, but you do have a sun umbrella in your garden, put it up and leave your pots underneath it.
If you huddle your pots together they will create their own microclimate which will help reduce evaporation. Also, try to keep them where they will be open to the elements, not under the eaves of the house, so that if it does rain they will feel the benefit.
Deadhead thoroughly
It's wise not only to deadhead spent blooms but to actually also cut off all flowers because then the plant won't have to work as hard to keep going and, hopefully, you will be greeted with a display of new flowers on your return.
Save hanging baskets
Hanging baskets are among the most difficult displays to save if you're away for two weeks, unless you have someone who will water them for you. This is because often the compost area isn't large enough to hold a lot of water so the compost will quickly dry out.
However, you could try placing the basket on top of a three-quarter full bucket of water, so the base of the basket is partially submerged and at least the roots will be getting some moisture.
Place the basket in the shade on top of the bucket and hopefully plants might be salvageable on your return.
Alternatively, find a shady spot in the garden and dig a hole into which you can place the basket (if you have only planted on the surface of the basket and not into the sides). Give the hole a good drench, place the basket in the hole, with the plants just above the surface and give them a really good soaking.
You could also cut holes in the base of a recycled two-litre plastic bottle, then upend it, securing the neck end in the compost of the hanging basket, and fill it with water, to allow the liquid to gradually seep down into the compost while you're away.
Harvest crops
If you are growing crops in pots, harvest as many as you can before you go. Many, such as peas, French and runner beans and spinach can be picked, blanched and frozen, while tomatoes can be cooked and pureed into passata. If a neighbour is watering your plants, invite them to help themselves to ripe tomatoes, courgettes and other produce which is ready for eating.
Water well before you go
Give container plants a good soak before you go, placing pot saucers underneath to take up any run-off. Water at the base of the plant until the water comes to the soil surface. Let it drain and then repeat.
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But in recent months the felling of the Sycamore Gap tree next to Hadrian's Wall in Northumberland has put our relationship with trees, and the natural world more widely, back under the men are due to be sentenced today for the crime that has been called a "mindless destruction". Canton calls it a "symbolic" moment. The felling of the Sycamore Gap has prompted calls for stricter legal protections for trees, not only to help prevent similar crimes in future but also to help the public appreciate the value of trees at a time when many of our woodlands are in poor health and targets for tree-planting are not being met. But even if the government were to back calls for greater legal protections, other questions remain - namely, which trees should be afforded greater legal protection? And arguably even more pressingly: should Britain be thinking more broadly about how to save our depleting woodlands - and is legal protection enough or is a fundamental rethink required? UK's 'odd relationship' with trees The Sycamore Gap wasn't a particularly ancient tree, nor a native species, but its position gave it a totemic status. Tucked into a fold of the hills in an area of outstanding beauty, the tree was famous around the world. People went there to have picnics, propose marriage, scatter ashes and to seek solace during at Northumbria University say the single tree's "dramatic and photogenic setting made it a culturally significant landmark", and it was often used as a symbol of the surrounding Northumberland region. Local people spoke of their sense of devastation at its loss, while Northumberland National Park Authority received thousands of emails, letters and messages. And yet despite being a nation of tree lovers, we live in one of the most nature-depleted countries on Earth - while we still aren't planting enough trees, despite calls by successive governments. The UK has 13% woodland cover, compared to an average of 38% in Europe, according to Prof Mary Gagen of the University of been planting more woodland in recent decades, with woodland creation rates much higher now than they were in the 2010s, yet even they remain off track, according to statistics from Forest Research. The target set by the previous Conservative government was to plant 30,000 hectares a year by 2025 across the UK, in line with the heyday of tree planting in the show that 20,700 hectares of new woodland was created in the UK between April 2023 and March 2024, a big achievement. However, this fell to 15,700 hectares over the year to March 2025, largely as a result of a drop-off in planting in Scotland. Rates in England, Wales and Northern Ireland went up – though from a low base. And the woodlands that already exist aren't in great shape. 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Yet many fall through the gaps. Only a fifth of our "oldest and most important veteran trees" are in protected areas, says Prof Gagen. Veteran trees are trees that through their own decay act as a habitat for other species, promoting Tree Council charity has written a report calling for greater protections for the country's "most important trees", such as at the Sycamore Gap. The outpouring of emotion and anger after the felling of the tree shows how valued these "socially, culturally and environmentally important trees are", says Jess Allan, science and research projects manager at the the back of a Heritage Trees Bill, introduced in December 2023 as a private members bill in the House of Lords, the charity is calling for legislation to create a statutory list of the most valuable trees and to impose stricter penalties for damaging them, mirroring the system for listed this could protect trees that are much-loved and culturally important because of their place in the landscape, as well as protecting ancient trees that are vital in preserving nature. Jon Stokes, the charity's director of trees, science and research, points out that in Portugal, the maximum fine for destroying a notable tree is €500,000 (£433,000).He says protecting our "most celebrated trees" is a no-brainer. "There are yew trees in this country that are older than Stonehenge – nobody would ever contemplate not protecting Stonehenge so why would a living thing that's older than Stonehenge not receive some protection?"He hopes something positive could come out of the felling of the Sycamore Gap: it's made people realise that some of the UK's trees are "truly vital to our culture and heritage and history – and our biodiversity - we should be looking after them better than we are at the moment".The Tree Council's report is currently being assessed by the government, but there is no date on when any decision will be released. 'You can't stop reckless acts' There are some who believe legal reforms are not enough. Even the proposed new measures might not have saved the famous sycamore: its felling involved trespass onto land owned by the Northumberland National Park. And a Tree Preservation Order wouldn't have made a difference either, says Sarah Dodd of Tree Law in Barry, Wales, a law firm that specialises in legal issues involving trees."Ultimately, you can put all the protection you want on trees, but some people are just going to break the law, you can't stop some people doing some reckless acts," she says. The bigger question, she says, is how we get people to appreciate the value of trees and therefore not want to fell them. She hopes that giving trees special legal status will raise their profile, and therefore make people recognise their Stokes, of the Tree Council, says if we are to maximise the biodiversity value of our trees we've got to celebrate and protect the old ones. 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Difficult choices ahead This will not be easy and Prof Gagen of Swansea University says saving the UK's woodlands is a complex problem that demands difficult choices around building."Unfortunately, for most people if asked if they'd like more new, cheaper housing or faster transport, or to protect nature, they are going to sacrifice a woodland," she says there is a need to ensure people are aware of the "true value of nature"."A single big tree in the right place is providing thousands of pounds worth of carbon store, flood protection, free air conditioning, habitat, wellbeing provision, pollution control and a hundred other benefits, and no one is asked to pay those costs if the tree is felled for development. That needs to change to save UK woodlands." As for Canton, he stills visits the Honywood Oak near his home, and is involved in projects to turn around the fortunes of the "forgotten forests", areas of ancient woodland that were historically turned into timber plantations and now need to be hopes that years from now we will have learned from the loss of the Sycamore Gap tree and others like it, and changed our attitude."I'd really like to think that in a generation's time, there will be rights for trees – trees that are over say 100 years old that you cannot do this, and you get much worse punishments than currently exist," he says."Hopefully in time we will gradually get there – our society is naturally catching up with our natural emotional connection with the natural world."Top image credit: Joe Daniel Price via Getty BBC InDepth is the home on the website and app for the best analysis, with fresh perspectives that challenge assumptions and deep reporting on the biggest issues of the day. And we showcase thought-provoking content from across BBC Sounds and iPlayer too. You can send us your feedback on the InDepth section by clicking on the button below.


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