June is a key month for planting, sowing, and keeping on top of fast early‑summer growth. Successional sowing continues to be the best way to ensure a steady supply of fresh produce.
🥗 Successional Sowing & Veg Plot Jobs
Keep sowing lettuce, radish, spring onions and salad leaves little and often. You can still sow carrots, beetroot and dwarf beans outdoors throughout June.
🧅 Onions
Onions put on strong growth now, which is vital for good bulb formation later. Feed with a balanced fertiliser and water during dry spells. A cupful of liquid seaweed in the watering can works wonders.
🥒 Cucumbers
Once established in warmth, cucumbers crop reliably all summer. They need heat, moisture and nutrients.
Commercial growers remove the tiny early fruits until plants reach 45–60 cm (18–24 inches). This encourages:
- A stronger root system
- More leaf growth
- Better yields over a longer period
Your first cucumber is always a joy — but giving the plant time to build strength pays off.
🥬 Spring Cabbages
A fun trick: after harvesting, leave the stump in the ground and cut an X in the top. It will re‑sprout with tender leafy greens. Worth a try this year.
🌱 Plants for Sale
Thank you to everyone who brought plants to The Hut last weekend — they disappeared quickly. I hope to bring courgettes this weekend. More squashes and pumpkins have been sown, but they’ll need time to establish.
🪴 Compost Update
Thatcher’s MP Compost is still delayed from the supplier. We’ll let you know as soon as it arrives.
💧 Keep Checking Moisture
Growth can be rapid in June. Keep beetroot, radishes, and turnips moist to ensure tender, quick‑maturing roots.
🍏 Fruit Trees
My apple tree is showing no fruit set, while the pear beside it is loaded. Common causes include:
- Lack of blossom (age or pruning)
- Poor pollination weather
- Frost damage
- Biennial bearing (resting after a heavy year)
If you have a plum tree, thin the small fruits to prevent branches snapping under a heavy crop.
🫘 Runner & Climbing Beans
If not already done, erect canes for runner beans. Climbing French beans can share the same structure — they’re happy to mingle.
🌸 Flower Care for June
- Pinch out fuchsias for bushier plants and more blooms
- Pick sweet peas as soon as they flower
- Dead‑head roses (repeat‑flowering types only)
- Cut back oriental poppies after flowering to encourage fresh foliage
- Stake tall perennials before wind catches them
- Tie in climbers such as honeysuckle and clematis with soft ties
- Prune evergreen clematis after flowering to maintain shape
- Cut back hardy geraniums once they finish flowering
- Harvest lavender for baking, crafting or garnishing
🌱 June Monthly Offer
10% off Tomato Feed Perfect timing as your plants move into their main growth phase.
Happy Gardening Mick Goodman Membership Secretary
