Box
Buxus sempervirens
Box is the classic plant for hedging, topiary, and formal garden structure — its tiny, dense, evergreen leaves respond beautifully to close clipping. It's been used in British gardens for centuries to create low hedges around herb gardens and parterres, geometric shapes, and elaborate topiary figures. However, box blight (Cylindrocladium buxicola) has become a serious problem in the UK since the early 2000s, causing brown patches and defoliation. Choose blight-resistant varieties like 'Faulkner' where possible, ensure good air circulation, and avoid overhead watering. If blight strikes, cut out affected growth, disinfect tools, and consider replacing badly affected plants with alternatives like Ilex crenata (Japanese holly), Euonymus japonicus 'Microphyllus', or Pittosporum 'Golf Ball'. Box grows slowly — about 15cm per year — so buy the largest plants you can afford for hedging. Clip in June (Derby Day is the traditional timing) and optionally again in September for a crisp finish through winter.
When to Sow Box
Sow box in March, April, May, September, October.
Time to Harvest Box
Expect to harvest approximately 36 months after sowing.
Expected Yield
Grows ~15cm/year; provides structure and form year-round once established.
Growing Tips
Slow-growing but long-lived
Common Problems with Box
Box blight
Brown patches and defoliation. Cut out affected growth, disinfect tools. Consider blight-resistant alternatives like Ilex crenata.
Box tree caterpillar
Devastating pest. Check for webbing and caterpillars from April. Use pheromone traps and Bacillus thuringiensis spray.
Slow growth
Box grows about 15cm/year. Buy larger plants if you need instant impact.
Plan your box in the allotment planner
Drag and drop plants onto your plot and get personalised sowing reminders.
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Rhododendron
Rhododendron spp.
Rhododendrons are magnificent evergreen shrubs that produce enormous trusses of flowers in spring — from delicate whites and pinks to vivid reds, purples, and even yellows. They're woodland plants that thrive in dappled shade, acidic soil (pH 4.5–6.0), and sheltered conditions. On neutral or alkaline soil, they simply won't thrive — the leaves turn yellow (chlorosis) and the plant slowly declines. In such conditions, grow compact varieties in large containers filled with ericaceous compost, watered with rainwater. 'Cunningham's White' and 'Christmas Cheer' are among the hardiest large hybrids. For smaller gardens, the 'yakushimanum' hybrids are compact, dome-shaped, and incredibly floriferous. Deadheading after flowering (snap off the spent flower trusses carefully, without damaging the new growth buds beneath) improves flowering the following year. Rhododendrons have shallow root systems — mulch annually with leaf mould or bark to keep the roots cool and moist.
Holly
Ilex aquifolium
Holly is one of Britain's most iconic native evergreens — its glossy, spiny leaves and bright red berries are synonymous with Christmas. It makes an excellent hedging plant (dense, spiny, and virtually impenetrable to intruders) and a fine specimen tree. Holly is dioecious, meaning you need both male and female plants for berries — the female produces the berries, but only if a male is nearby for pollination. Confusingly, some varieties have misleading names: 'Golden King' is female (with berries) and 'Golden Queen' is male. 'J.C. van Tol' is a useful almost self-fertile variety. Holly tolerates heavy shade, pollution, coastal exposure, and most soil types — it's one of the toughest plants in the British garden. It can be pruned hard and topiarised into shapes. The berries provide vital winter food for birds, particularly thrushes and waxwings. Holly grows slowly, so buy the largest plant you can afford for hedging purposes.
Hydrangea
Hydrangea macrophylla
Hydrangeas are among the most popular garden shrubs in the UK, valued for their enormous, long-lasting flower heads in shades of blue, pink, purple, and white. The flower colour of mophead (Hortensia) and lacecap types is famously influenced by soil pH: in acidic soil (below pH 5.5) they produce blue flowers; in alkaline soil, pink. To keep blue flowers blue, add aluminium sulphate or use ericaceous compost; to keep pink flowers pink, add lime. White varieties stay white regardless. 'Nikko Blue' and 'Endless Summer' are popular blue varieties; 'Madame Emile Mouillère' is the best white. Hydrangeas prefer partial shade — hot afternoon sun scorches the leaves and flowers. They need consistently moist soil and will wilt dramatically in drought (though they recover quickly after watering). Prune mophead and lacecap types in spring by cutting just above the first pair of healthy buds below last year's flower head. The dried flower heads provide winter structure — leave them on until spring.
Azalea
Rhododendron spp.
Azaleas are essentially compact, often deciduous rhododendrons that produce an astonishing abundance of flowers in spring. The deciduous types (Mollis and Knap Hill hybrids) are particularly spectacular, covering themselves in flowers before the leaves emerge, and many offer superb autumn foliage colour too — giving you two seasons of interest. They share the same acidic soil requirement as rhododendrons (pH 4.5–6.0), and on alkaline soil must be grown in containers of ericaceous compost watered with rainwater. Japanese azaleas are evergreen, compact, and incredibly floriferous — 'Palestrina' (white) and 'Hino Crimson' (red) are classics. They're shade-tolerant and perfect for underplanting beneath trees. Azaleas have shallow root systems, so mulch annually and don't cultivate around them. They need very little pruning — just remove dead wood and shape lightly after flowering if necessary. Feed with an ericaceous fertiliser in spring.