Gardening & Horticulture — 2026-04-27
National Gardening Week 2026 is in full swing across the UK, inspiring gardeners to get hands in soil and embrace the season. The Greater Des Moines Botanical Garden's Spring Garden Market is generating buzz as one of the region's most anticipated plant sales. Meanwhile, the vegetable gardening community on Reddit is celebrating early harvests and sharing tips on keeping produce crisp and fresh.
Gardening & Horticulture — 2026-04-27
What to Plant & Do Right Now
With late April upon us and the growing season in full gear across both the UK and North America, here's what experienced gardeners are prioritizing this week:
1. Direct-sow warm-season vegetables outdoors (where frost has passed) Beans, squash, courgettes, and cucumber are prime candidates for direct outdoor sowing now. In regions like Colorado Springs, extension specialists caution gardeners that average last freeze dates are still in mid-May — waiting until Mother's Day or Memorial Day weekend offers the safest window for frost-sensitive crops like tomatoes and peppers.
2. Plant out spring brassicas and salad crops under cover The RHS advises sowing quick-maturing cut-and-come-again salads such as loose-leaf lettuce and rocket in an unheated glasshouse or under cloches now, for crops in the coming weeks. Bok choy planted under cover can be harvested well into early summer, and a follow-up sowing in late August extends the season to autumn.
3. Grow in containers, buckets, and bags The Old Farmer's Almanac highlights that five-gallon buckets, large bags, and even trash cans are excellent for crops like tomatoes, peppers, courgette, and potatoes — ideal for gardeners with limited ground space. Fill with high-quality potting compost, ensure drainage holes, and position in full sun.
Trending in the Garden World
National Gardening Week 2026 — UK Gardeners Get Growing

- What's happening: National Gardening Week 2026 is underway across the UK, with garden centres, horticultural societies, and media rallying gardeners of all experience levels to get outside. Tates of Sussex is running a dedicated hub of tips, ideas, and inspiration for the occasion.
- Why gardeners care: This annual week creates a community surge of motivation — from first-time vegetable growers to seasoned allotment holders — and often coincides with garden centres' best seasonal stock arriving.
Spring Garden Market at the Greater Des Moines Botanical Garden

- What's happening: The Greater Des Moines Botanical Garden has kicked off its much-anticipated Spring Garden Market — described as one of the most popular plant sales in the Des Moines area — as gardeners "wake up" the garden and ease into spring planting.
- Why gardeners care: Events like this give home gardeners access to expertly grown starter plants, unusual varieties, and hands-on advice from botanical garden horticulturists, making it a valuable shortcut to a successful season.
Clemson Extension: Seasonal Wildlife Gardening Guidance Updated

- What's happening: Clemson University's Home & Garden Information Center (HGIC) has published updated guidance on seasonal wildlife gardening, covering how spring maintenance strategies — including native plant selection and habitat creation — can benefit wildlife year-round.
- Why gardeners care: With pollinators under increasing pressure, integrating native plants and wildlife-friendly practices into everyday garden maintenance is both environmentally impactful and increasingly trending among home gardeners.
Expert Corner
RHS Chief Horticulturist on Spring Flowers RHS Chief Horticulturist Guy Barter recommends using late April to begin planting early-season flowers such as pansies, violas, and hardy annuals to bring colour to borders as spring truly establishes. Hardy bulbs planted now — particularly summer bulbs like dahlias and gladioli — will pay dividends by July.
RHS Money-Saving Tip: Make Your Own Containers The RHS suggests that instead of buying pots and cell trays, gardeners can make their own using rolled newspaper or the cardboard centres from kitchen roll. Alternatively, supermarket produce trays work well as seed-starting flats — a practical, zero-cost option that's also eco-friendly.
Colorado State University Extension: Protect Plants from Late Frosts CSU Extension's El Paso County Lawn and Garden Help Desk (responding to a 2026 planting query) notes that warm spring weather often tempts gardeners to plant too early. Their advice: you can begin planting early, but be prepared to protect plants with frost cloth or cloches if temperatures dip. For most of Colorado Springs, the safest window for warm-season crops remains after Mother's Day weekend.
Sustainable & Urban Growing
1. Permaculture Principles for Home Gardeners A fresh guide from GardeningTipsAndTools (published five days ago) breaks down permaculture gardening as a sustainable approach that merges edible landscaping, wildlife gardening, and ecosystem thinking. Key techniques include stacking plants in layers (canopy, shrub, ground cover) to maximize yield from small spaces, and designing gardens that largely maintain themselves over time.

2. Organic Urban Farming is Booming A Hindustan Times piece from two days ago reports that India is now ranked No. 1 globally in organic farming, yet only 2–3% of cultivable land is currently under chemical-free cultivation — highlighting both the scale of interest and the enormous room for growth. For home gardeners, this underlines the relevance of organic methods at every level, from balcony pots to suburban plots.
3. Grow Vegetables in Small Spaces Using Buckets & Bags The Old Farmer's Almanac this week spotlights container vegetable growing as one of the most accessible ways to get food-growing results quickly. From five-gallon buckets to woven grow bags, crops like tomatoes, cucumbers, lettuce, and herbs thrive with good drainage, quality compost, and a sunny spot — no garden beds required.
Community Spotlight
First Big Harvest of the Season — How to Keep It Crisp Two days ago on r/vegetablegardening, a post titled "First big harvest of the year! What's the best way to keep these crisp?" garnered 259 upvotes and 42 comments. The gardener shared a photo of their freshly picked haul and asked community members for tips on extending crispness beyond a few days. Top community advice in the thread included wrapping produce loosely in damp paper towels, storing in airtight containers in the coldest part of the fridge, and harvesting early in the morning when produce holds the most moisture.
Layout Planning Tip from the Community An earlier 2026 Reddit thread on r/vegetablegardening featured a detailed backyard vegetable garden layout plan. One standout strategy shared: planting cucumbers and climbing melons strategically to create shade and a microclimate that extends the growing season for cool-weather crops like bok choy through mid-summer heat — then resowing bok choy in late August for a fall harvest.
This Week's Action Items
- 🌱 Start now: Direct-sow beans, squash, and cucumbers outdoors if your last frost has passed; start tomato and pepper transplants under cover if it hasn't. Plant out hardy cut-and-come-again salads under cloches or in an unheated greenhouse.
- 🔍 Watch for: Late frost events in higher-elevation and northern regions — temperatures can still dip below freezing through mid-May in many parts of North America. Keep frost cloth handy for warm-season seedlings.
- 📚 Learn about: Permaculture layering techniques — specifically the "forest garden" approach of stacking canopy, shrub, herbaceous, and ground-cover plants — as a way to dramatically increase yield from even a small suburban garden plot.
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