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A Year of Cut Flowers
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What's Included

Planning a flower garden

Deciding what to grow

Year-round flower growing

Harvesting & arranging

A Year of Cut Flowers
37 lessons | 6 hours
A great garden doesn’t just look good. It can fill your home with beauty, scent, and life - all year round. In this course, top gardeners Henrietta Courtauld and Bridget Elworthy of The Land Gardeners take you behind the scenes of their flower farm in France and London studio, sharing their approach to growing, harvesting, and arranging cut flowers. You’ll learn how to design a cutting garden from scratch, plan for floral abundance, collect and store seeds, and condition flowers so they last longer in the vase. This course will give you the skills, confidence, and knowledge to create breathtaking, homegrown arrangements.
“
We're so excited to take you through a whole year in the cutting garden, starting in January - what you can be doing moving right through the whole year, so that you can have something to pick year-round. It doesn't need to be daunting. It's actually really simple.
— The Land Gardeners
Billed annually
One time purchase

Lesson Plan
37 LESSONS / 6 HOURS
Meet The Land Gardeners
Bridget and Henrietta, The Land Gardeners, welcome you to the course, explaining how they first came to grow cut flowers as well as what they will be covering in the course.
Planning your cut flower garden - Part 1: Influences and inspiration
Planning a garden is essential if you want to have cut flowers throughout the year. In this lesson, Bridget and Henrietta discuss the benefits of having a sowing and planting plan, and advise how to create a mood board for designing a garden
Planning your cut flower garden - Part 2: Designing a dedicated cut flower bed
In this lesson, The Land Gardeners design a 4m × 8m flower bed filled with edging plants, bulbs, perennials, annuals and biennials that will produce cut flowers in all seasons. They also discuss the conditions required to achieve a well-performing cut flower bed.
Planning your cut flower garden - Part 3: Adding cut flowers to existing beds
You can add cutting flowers to an existing garden without having to create a dedicated flower bed. Bridget and Henrietta offer advice on how to ensure a year-round supply of cut flowers.
Planning your cut flower garden - Part 4: Planting into wilder areas
Areas of long grass, orchards and lawns offer opportunities for planting bulbs, shrubs and trees that can produce blooms and foliage from February to Christmas. The Land Gardeners introduce their tried and tested favourites.
Having the right tools
Bridget and Henrietta display their selection of essential garden tools and give practical tips on how to use them and how to avoid losing them in the garden. They also show the best methods for cleaning, sharpening and storing tools to maintain them in top condition.
Cutting from the garden in spring - Part 1: Woad, scabious, hesperis and cerinthe
It is the end of April and The Land Gardeners are in the informal part of their Cornish garden, picking self-seeding plants for an early spring flower arrangement.
Cutting from the garden in spring - Part 2: Angelica and apple blossom
In this lesson, Bridget and Henrietta encourage us to grow fruiting trees, not only for their fruits but also for the impact their blossoms make in arrangements.
Cutting from the garden in spring - Part 3: Guelder rose, euphorbia, currants and artichokes
Shrubs are one of Bridget and Henrietta’s passions, valued for being low-maintenance and for their usefulness in spring floral arrangements. Discover some of their favourite flowering shrubs as well as must-have foliage for arrangements.
Tulips - Part 1: Harvesting
In this lesson, Bridget and Henrietta explain the differences in growing annual and perennial tulips, and give advice on how to harvest their flowers to create long-lasting, strong blooms for colourful indoor displays.
Tulips - Part 2: Arranging
The Land Gardeners grow a range of striking, multicoloured tulip varieties that bloom from early April till the end of May. In this lesson they discuss the attributes of their favourite tulips while making two impressive arrangements.
Low-maintenance flowers for grassland
Learn how to use grasslands as low-maintenance gardens by planting bulbs and shrub roses to have a supply of cut flowers throughout spring and summer.
Sweet peas: Planting out and creating a teepee
A step-by-step demonstration of how to make a teepee to support sweet peas. This lesson also includes practical information on sowing, planting seedlings, and picking sweet peas to keep them flowering from early summer and into the autumn.
Summer in the garden - An introduction
The Land Gardeners are dealing with a new exciting project in an old garden in France; they are developing a walled garden for cut flowers and working on improving the soil with green manures and compost teas.
Go-to cut flowers in summer - Part 1: Peonies, cosmos, Verbena bonariensis and valerian
In this lesson, the spotlight falls on long-flowering summer plants: cosmos, Verbena bonariensis and peonies. You will find recommendations for the best varieties of early, mid-season and late-flowering peonies that flower in succession throughout spring.
Go-to cut flowers in summer - Part 2: Shrubs, lilies and digitalis
Lilacs and philadelphus make excellent cut flowers provided they are properly prepared. In this lesson, Bridget and Henrietta share tips on keeping these plants in top condition, and advise on growing lilies and foxgloves.
Go-to cut flowers in summer - Part 3: Favourite perennial flowers
Perennial plants come in a great variety of shapes, heights and colours. In this lesson, Bridget and Henrietta talk about the joy of growing perennials and discuss the ones they use frequently in summer arrangements, such as delphiniums, phlox, catmint, phlomis, feverfew and penstemon
Go-to cut flowers in summer - Part 4: Favourite annual flowers
Bridget and Henrietta present a selection of their favourite annuals - gypsophila, poppies, cosmos and antirrhinum, as well as herbs, cornflowers and nicotiana. Planted in February and March, these annuals give pleasure through much of the year both in the garden and indoors.
Picking peonies
In this lesson the focus is on planting, caring for and picking peonies. You will also find many practical tips on when and how to move peonies, the best ways of getting maximum light into their roots, and how to deal with an invasion of black mould (peony botrytis).
Delphiniums
These impressive but delicate plants need special care to help them flower from early June to late September. The Land Gardeners explain what to do to make delphiniums grow tall and strong.
Dahlias - Part 1: Planting
This lesson provides a step-by-step guide to preparing and planting dahlia tubers - from inspecting the tubers for root damage, to planting them in specially enriched soil.
Dahlias - Part 2: Dividing
Bridget and Henrietta demonstrate how to divide a large, tuberous dahlia root by cutting or pulling it apart to create more plants, as well as how to take a rooted cutting.
Roses
In this lesson, we learn how to differentiate between various types of roses: continuous and once-flowering ones, climbers and ramblers, old roses, shrub roses and hybrid teas. Also included are useful tips and the names of the best rose growers in the UK.
Dahlias - Part 3: Staking and picking
The Land Gardeners are in France in September, dealing with the challenge of staking their favourite dahlia variety, ‘Otto’s Thrill’, with bamboo canes and string. Also included are tips on prolonging dahlias’ flowering time well into the autumn, as well as when and how to pick the blooms to create the longest stems possible.
Dahlias - Part 4: Different varieties and arranging
Bridget and Henrietta frequently use dahlias in their cut flower arrangements. In this lesson, they discuss the characteristic features of their favourite 14 dahlia varieties and advise on the resources available to help you choose the most suitable varieties.
Cosmos
The Land Gardeners are in their French garden, discussing the best ways to plant, stake and cut cosmos. They also introduce us to their four favourite cosmos varieties.
Sweet peas: Tying-in and collecting seeds
In this lesson we learn what to do to extend the flowering period of sweet peas from summer into the autumn.
Planting bulbs in grassland
The focus in this lesson is on the naturalistic planting of bulbs - crocus, narcissi, snowdrops, camassias and tulips. In this lesson you’ll also find demonstrations of different planting techniques, depending on the size of the bulbs used.
Planting tulip bulbs
Bridget and Henrietta give a step-by-step guide to preparing a tulip bed and planting the bulbs in a trench, to provide an abundance of blooms to cut in spring. They give advice on how to treat perennial tulips to avoid tulip fever and recommend four of their favourite tulip varieties.
An arrangement using autumn favourites
The Land Gardeners have picked a great variety of cut blooms, shrubs and herbs appearing in an impressive range of sizes, shapes, colours and scents. In this lesson they create an arrangement using dahlias, cosmos, roses and verbena, as well as sage, fennel and dill
Bringing winter flowers inside - Part 1: An introduction
In this lesson, Bridget and Henrietta challenge us to bring nature into our homes every week of the year by using trees, shrubs, bulbs and blossoms as an inspiration for creating winter arrangements.
Bringing winter flowers inside - Part 2: Hellebores
The Land Gardeners have transformed an unproductive patch of ground into a heaven for hellebores. In this lesson they give advice on how to lift and pot up hellebores for decoration indoors.
Bringing winter flowers inside - Part 3: Aconites and snowdrops
These tiny flowers growing under an old chestnut tree can be dug up, potted up in china bowls, brought inside for decoration, and returned to the ground once the flowers are over.
Bringing winter flowers inside - Part 4: A few other favourites
A guide to the best plants to use in making small and large winter arrangements. They range from tiny cyclamens and violets to quinces and winter-flowering cherries.
Forcing bulbs
Forcing bulbs enables us to have some colour indoors in winter. Bridget and Henrietta advise us to plant the bulbs in pots in October/November and keep them for a few weeks in a cold and dark place before bringing them out for display inside the home.
Dividing peonies
Contrary to common belief, peonies benefit from being moved, and in this lesson Bridget and Henrietta demonstrate when and how to move peonies, how to divide their roots, and how to store them in winter.
Planting a bare root rose
Winter is the time to plant bare root roses. This lesson guides you through all the steps necessary to produce healthy, strong roses by the summer.
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