Butternut Squash
Cucurbita moschata
Butternut squash is one of the most satisfying crops to grow — the golden, nutty-sweet flesh stores for months after harvest, providing home-grown food right through winter. In the UK, it needs a warm start: sow seeds on their edge in pots under cover in April, and don't plant out until early June when the soil is genuinely warm. Give each plant at least a square metre — the trailing vines are vigorous. Train them along the edges of beds or let them ramble over compost heaps. Once 2–3 fruits have set, pinch out the growing tips to direct the plant's energy into swelling the existing fruits. Harvest before the first frost in September–October; the skin should be hard enough that you can't dent it with your fingernail. Cure in the sun or a warm room for a week to toughen the skin, then store somewhere cool and dry. 'Waltham Butternut' and 'Hunter' F1 are reliable in the UK.
Plan where to grow Butternut Squash using our vegetable garden planner.
When to Sow Butternut Squash
Sow butternut squash in April, May.
Time to Harvest Butternut Squash
Expect to harvest approximately 4 months after sowing.
Companion Plants
Expected Yield
2–5 fruits per plant, each weighing 0.8–1.5kg. Stores for 3–6 months.
Growing Tips
Needs plenty of space to spread
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Cherry Tomato
Solanum lycopersicum var. cerasiforme
Cherry tomatoes are one of the most rewarding crops for UK allotment growers. These small, sweet fruits ripen reliably even in cooler summers, producing heavy trusses from July right through to October. They thrive in grow bags, pots, or directly in the ground, making them versatile for any plot size. Pinch out side shoots regularly on cordon varieties to channel energy into fruit production. Bush varieties like 'Tumbling Tom' need no training and work brilliantly in hanging baskets. Feed weekly with a high-potash tomato feed once the first fruits set. The key to great flavour is letting them ripen fully on the vine rather than picking early.
Beefsteak Tomato
Solanum lycopersicum
Beefsteak tomatoes produce the large, meaty fruits that are perfect for slicing into sandwiches and burgers. They need a long growing season in the UK, so starting seeds early under cover is essential. These are almost always grown as cordons — train them up a single stem, removing side shoots weekly. Each truss produces fewer but much larger fruits than cherry types, often weighing 200–500g each. They benefit from greenhouse growing in cooler regions, though sheltered outdoor spots in the south can produce good results. Consistent watering is critical; irregular watering causes blossom end rot and fruit splitting. Stop the plant at 4–5 trusses to ensure fruits ripen before autumn.
Nantes Carrot
Daucus carota
Nantes carrots are the gold standard for flavour — sweet, crisp, and cylindrical with a smooth skin that barely needs peeling. They perform well in most UK soils but prefer light, stone-free ground to grow straight. If your soil is heavy clay, grow them in raised beds or deep containers filled with sandy compost. Sow thinly to avoid the need for heavy thinning, which attracts carrot fly. Cover rows with fine mesh or enviromesh as a physical barrier against carrot fly — this is far more reliable than companion planting alone. Successional sowing from March to July gives you carrots from June through to winter. Late sowings can be left in the ground over winter under a thick mulch of straw.
Butterhead Lettuce
Lactuca sativa
Butterhead lettuce produces soft, rounded heads with tender, buttery-textured leaves that melt in the mouth. It's one of the quickest salad crops to grow — ready in as little as 8 weeks from sowing. Unlike iceberg types, butterheads tolerate partial shade and are less likely to bolt in warm spells. Sow small batches every 2–3 weeks from March to September for a continuous supply. They work well as an intercrop between slower-growing vegetables like brassicas and leeks. Water consistently but avoid wetting the leaves to reduce the risk of grey mould. 'All the Year Round' is the classic UK variety and lives up to its name, performing well in almost every season.