Cut and Come Again Masterclass

How to make your patch successional

with SARAH RAVEN — Acclaimed English gardener, cook and writer. Host of the UK’s No.1 gardening podcast.

Lesson 40 of 48

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Successional growing is the key to making the most of your cutting patch. In this lesson, Sarah will help you plan your way through the seasons.

From the Lesson Workbook

How to Make Your Patch Successional

If you want your cutting patch to be highly productive, then you need to take things out in order to make room for plants which will be more productive in the coming season.

If you take Ammi majus as an example, while it might still be flowering in late July, it will have started to look quite ropey, so the best thing to do is take it out of the patch.

This will keep surrounding flowers, in this case phlox, scabious and zinnias, room to develop to their full potential, with the scabious and zinnias flowering until the end of September and the phlox potentially flowering until mid November.

The thing you always need to think about is whether you have enough for the next season. You can use your original planting plan to keep track of this, so you are aware of what flowers in each of the seasons.

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Rated 4.7/5 on Trustpilot

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Very good tutorial from a professional garden...

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Sarah Raven

Your Instructor

Sarah Raven

Acclaimed English gardener, cook and writer. Host of the UK’s No.1 gardening podcast.

Sarah Raven is a renowned English gardener, cook and award-winning author. She is an inspirational and passionate teacher - combining her decades of experience with her scientific approach to growing (she is medically trained) - and has been running cooking, flower arranging and gardening courses at Perch Hill, her 90-acre farm in East Sussex, and around the UK for over 30 years. She has written for a host of major publications - including House & Garden, The Saturday Telegraph, Country Living, Gardens Illustrated, Gardeners’ World Magazine and The English Garden - and presented on TV shows including Gardeners' World and BBC’s Great British Garden Revival. Her gardening and cookery books have won numerous awards including ‘Best Specialist Gardening Book’ for The Cutting Garden and ‘Cookery Book of the Year’ for Sarah Raven's Garden Cookbook. Sarah is married to the writer Adam Nicolson, Vita Sackville-West's grandson. She also has an online shop that is a brilliant destination for plants, bulbs, seeds, tools and all things garden.

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