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Chilly November Mornings in the Garden – How Do You Cope?

(40 Posts)
Nandalot Fri 21-Nov-25 18:29:17

butterandjam, beware of pruning cherry and plum trees at this time of year as they can be susceptible to a fungus, leaf curl. My brother lost two cherry trees like this. Apparently, best time to prune is late summer before it gets cold.

Allira Fri 21-Nov-25 18:12:50

More leaves to sweep up and the lavender needs chopping back.

The beds were mulched ages ago but some lovely weeds wildflowers are growing through.
Does anyone know how to get rid of Fox and Cubs, very pretty but it's taking over and is difficult to dig out.

starnded Fri 21-Nov-25 17:59:03

What can one do in a garden at this time of year?

I am new to this.

Whitewavemark2 Fri 21-Nov-25 16:49:22

Too cold for me - there is no pleasure in it, but I do need now that the frost has done for them to dig up the dahlias and replace them with tulips.

Hoping to do that in the next week or so when the weather warms up.

I fiddle in the garden on better days until the big spring tidy up.

Georgesgran Fri 21-Nov-25 16:25:30

Last garden bin collection of the year here today - my bin was rammed. There’s still a lot of leaves and apples to fall, so I’m hoping for a fine weekend or two to get those into the bin. Otherwise, I’ll be feeding the birds, but not much else for a while.

Cherrytree59 Fri 21-Nov-25 16:05:00

Out in garden at lunch time , as by that time sun had melted most of the frost.

Heated waistcoat ( gilet) kept me warm.
Only a few leaves and some plants that had succumbed to the frost to put in garden bin.
Had just come back from walk so body had acclimatised and no sudden cold shock.
Rain tomorrow so I needed to be out and about in the sunshine today.
As you say good for the soul.

AuntieE Fri 21-Nov-25 15:00:51

My garden can look after itself until April. I have plenty of more interesting things to do indoors where it is warm.

You are obviously an enthusiastic gardener, so buy yourself some really warm clothes and boots for Christmas, or in the January sales.

M0nica Fri 21-Nov-25 14:30:33

On a cold sunny day, with leaves to rake, nothing better exists. But that of course is a mid to late afternoon job as the shadows lengthen.

Not doing it this year. My leaf filled garden is a thing of the past. I have a small town centre garden, currently almost entirely unplanted and raw earth - but come the spring tall shrubs are going to be planted around the perimeter wall - so I will have leaves next autumn.

Jaxjacky Fri 21-Nov-25 14:27:45

Our garden had ‘muck* put on it three weeks ago, I’ve got a bag left for the veg bed in January when we’ve cropped, hopefully, parsnips and sprouts, the few cabbage we can work around. Pruning all done apart from a climber and grasses, they’ll be done early spring, I can’t work out there in the cold, my fingers go numb and are useless.

butterandjam Fri 21-Nov-25 14:18:58

First hard frost two nights ago. First snow at our level (very sleety) last week. Lots on the mountains.

Finished mulching the allotment raised beds in October ; a 6inch cover of fresh seaweed for all. Straight from the beach in sacks onto the beds; the rain takes care of salt and the worms dig most of it in over winter. Great effect on soil structure and fertility. Any left by worms, will be raked up to cover next years potato beds.

I have two very busy dalek compost bins which were also emptied and spread in Oct, then filled up with any unready stuff and the summer's growth waste material , layered with leaves, seaweed, grass cuttings, kitchen waste and ( new trial) the feather fillimgs from two old cushions. (Very messy, lots of feathers flew off and escaped as I tipped them in) They are already warm . In the next few months I'll collect bags of horse manure, also used as activating layers in bins.

I've cleaned out and washed the greenhouse (inside) .

Sowed some aquadulce broad beans in beds under cloches; never tried an autumn sowing before. They are UP but something ( mouse or slugs) is nibbling them.

Garlic planted in September is also up.

The shed is chaotic and needs a total clear out. The paths need weeding.

I have a load of potted up cowslips to plant out (grown from seed, from a plant friend gave me last year)

Plum tree was so overladen with fruit it broke some branches, it and the cherry tree both need pruning.

almost a year and still no sign of life on the drilled and filled shitake "mushroom farm" logs. If they don't get their shit together they will go to hell as fire logs .

merlotgran Fri 21-Nov-25 13:53:57

I’ve been in my garden most of the morning as I still had some dahlias to take out of their pots and store in the shed for the winter.
I was wearing jeans (no tights underneath,) thermal vest, fleece jumper and a fleece gilet. I was as warm as toast in the sunshine apart from my fingers. Gardening gloves just don’t keep them warm.
I always feel better for being outside and the hot soup for lunch was very welcome.

Shelflife Fri 21-Nov-25 13:32:56

No gardening for me in this freezing weather !

aggie Fri 21-Nov-25 13:17:08

No point mulching frozen ground now ! It needs to be mulched weeks ago before the frost , you are only locking the frost inn

keepingquiet Fri 21-Nov-25 13:14:12

Not me- leaving the gardening until spring now.

OliviaRema Fri 21-Nov-25 09:56:06

Good morning, everyone!

Brr, it's a crisp one out there today, isn't it? With clear skies but temperatures hovering around the freezing mark and that biting wind, my joints are protesting before I've even stepped outside. I've been itching to mulch the beds and protect my perennials from the frost, but the chill makes every bend and stretch feel twice as hard. Still, nothing beats that fresh air for the soul – even if it means bundling up like an onion!

Anyone else braving the garden in this weather? Share your ways to stay warm and nimble while tending the plot; I'd love a cosy chat over it.