Try GOLD - Free
Celebrating Organic September!
Kitchen Garden
|September 2024
In this special section we bring you four great features aimed at improving your crops and allowing nature to thrive
-
MAKE YOUR GARDEN MATTER
This Organic September, Garden Organic is showing that all gardens -no matter how small - can make a difference to biodiversity. Alice Whitehead shares the gardening charity's top tips...
A container of herbs can offer up bundles of fragrant cuttings for the kitchen and pretty flowers - but this little bit of green could also make a big difference to wildlife. When knitted together between gardens and streets, even a raised-bed vegetable plot or patio of flowerpots can have a positive impact on nature. And if everyone in your neighbourhood joined in, imagine the difference it would make to biodiversity loss.
In our Every Garden Matters research paper, published in March, we showed how small steps in front gardens, balconies, shed roofs and vegetable patches can create green corridors in towns and cities which increase biodiversity around your home and in the community. This 'biodiversity' includes all life forms such as plants and soil micro-organisms, which go on to support invertebrates, reptiles, amphibians, birds and mammals.
Figures show global wildlife populations have plummeted by 69% on average since 1970, with the main drivers being human use of land and climate change. As rural habitats fragment, gardens and vegetable patches become dispersal highways for wildlife to find food, shelter and breeding grounds.
This story is from the September 2024 edition of Kitchen Garden.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Kitchen Garden
Kitchen Garden
THE NATIONAL VEGETABLE SOCIETY GUIDE TO SHOWING
CHOOSING THE BEST VARIETIES FOR THE SHOW BENCH
4 mins
May 2026
Kitchen Garden
PLANTS FOR PREDATORS
Dr Anton Rosenfeld of Garden Organic explains why predators matter and the plants needed to help bring them to your garden
3 mins
May 2026
Kitchen Garden
MAY DAYS DELIGHT
As April gives way to May, the garden begins to surge ahead. Sarah Purser captures that turning point, when plans start to take shape and the season gathers real momentum
3 mins
May 2026
Kitchen Garden
STRAWBERRIES WITH FLAVOUR
Enjoy sweet, flavour-packed crops with these high- quality, cold-stored strawberry plants from Pomona Fruits, selected for taste, yield and reliability
1 mins
May 2026
Kitchen Garden
PICK TEAR EAT
Anna Cairns Pettigrew cuts what's ready, using leaves, herbs and new potatoes to create quick, generous and tasty plates
3 mins
May 2026
Kitchen Garden
THE RIGHT STUFF
Becky Searle explains how choosing the right mulch for your soil type can transform structure, moisture retention and long-term fertility, helping you get better results for much less effort
5 mins
May 2026
Kitchen Garden
CELERY & CELERIAC - WORTH A SECOND LOOK
Martin Fish shows how to grow celery and celeriac with simple, reliable methods from seed to harvest
3 mins
May 2026
Kitchen Garden
ON THE PLOT THAT PROVED THEM WRONG
Two decades on from a sceptical start, Carolyn Goodliff has transformed a neglected plot into a productive, beautiful space – and built a community around it
4 mins
May 2026
Kitchen Garden
How everything can have a use
This month Stephanie Hafferty is exploring permaculture principle five - putting what we've already got to hand to use on the plot
4 mins
May 2026
Kitchen Garden
Leggy seedlings
Warmth, low light and a bit too much kindness can all lead to leggy seedlings at this time of year. They stretch, weaken and topple just when you want them to be building strength. The good news is they're rarely a lost cause – and a few simple adjustments will get them back on track
1 min
May 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
