

Gardening with the RHS
Royal Horticultural Society
'Gardening with the RHS' offers seasonal advice, inspiration and practical solutions to gardening problems. Trusted gardening professionals give you the latest horticultural advice, scientific research and tried and tested techniques to bring out the best in your garden.Topics covered include: growing your own vegetables, flowers, garden design, lawn care and gardening with children. Plus expert masterclasses in topics ranging from cottage garden plants, growing orchids, to pest control and eco-friendly gardening.Plus we’ll have behind the scenes reports from the country’s most prestigious flower shows. There’s something in these podcasts to interest every gardener, whatever your level of expertise.For more info see www.rhs.org.uk/podcastA Pixiu production.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 26, 2026 • 30min
Resilient gardens, blossoming trees & growing cucumbers
This week we’re embracing the arrival of spring in the garden. RHS horticultural advisor Jenny Bowden applies a right plant, right place approach in her sandy, drought-prone garden in southeast England. Embracing experimentation, she’s creating a resilient, low-maintenance space that shows even challenging conditions can thrive. We’ll also be celebrating the breathtaking displays of blossom unfolding across the UK right now, as RHS expert Jonathan Newell joins us to explore the rich variety of flowering trees and shrubs in bloom, and what makes this time of year so special for gardeners and nature lovers alike.And to round things off, our resident veg growing affionado Liz Mooney returns with another allotment favourite: this time turning her attention to cucumbers.
Host: Jenny Laville
Contributors: Jenny Bowden, Jonathan Newell, Liz Mooney
Links:
Drought-resistant plants
Drought-resistant gardening
Guide to growing cucumbers
Liz Mooney’s top tomato cultivars
Liz Mooney’s guide to aubergines, sweet peppers, and chillis
Liz Mooney’s guide to peas
Liz Mooney’s guide to potatoes

Mar 19, 2026 • 34min
An ode to home grown
This week, we’re focusing on the edible garden, and the simple yet radical act of growing your own food in an age of convenience. Food writer Nancy Matsumoto explores how our globalised food system is impacting both people and planet, and why women-led initiatives could help shape a more sustainable future. RHS Garden Wisley’s Liz Mooney joins us from the World Food Garden to answer everything you ever wanted to know about growing potatoes. And finally, Nick Turrell and Jenny Laville sit down to look at how you can get started growing your own – without ending up with a mountain of plastic along the way.
Host: Nick Turrell
Contributors: Nancy Matsumoto, Liz Mooney, Jenny Laville
Links:
Reaping What She Sows book
Nancy Matsumoto’s substack ‘Reaping’
Liz Mooney’s top tomato cultivars
Liz Mooney’s guide to aubergines, sweet peppers, and chillis
Liz Mooney’s guide to peas
How to go plastic-free in your garden

Mar 12, 2026 • 35min
Spring into wellbeing: primroses, pollinators, and peas
With the first glimmers of spring starting to show through, this week we’re diving into the theme of wellbeing – both for us and our garden wildlife. RHS Science & Horticulture Editor Olivia Drake joins us to explain why the common primrose is an essential early source of nectar for pollinators.
We’ll also be exploring the powerful role gardens can play in our own health and wellbeing. The RHS has just launched a new science-backed Wellbeing Blueprint, designed to help anyone create a garden that actively supports wellbeing. Ashby Sachs and Vicky Shearing, who worked on the project, join us to talk about what the research reveals, and how we can all put those insights into practice.
And finally we’ll also be dropping by the World Food Garden at RHS Garden Wisley, where edibles expert Liz Mooney will be showing us how, where and when to sow peas for a great harvest later in the year.
Host: Guy Barter
Contributors: Olivia Drake, Liz Mooney, Ross Cameron, Ashby Sachs, Victoria
Links:
RHS Daffodil Diaries
Primroses
RHS Wellbeing Garden Blueprint
What to plant in a wellbeing garden
The science behind the RHS Wellbeing Garden Blueprint
How to grow peas

Mar 5, 2026 • 37min
Learning From The Wild
This week, we’re leafing through the pages of The Plant Review to explore a simple question: what can we learn from the wild?
American plantsman Daniel J. Hinkley reflects on a lifetime of exploration that has taken him to some of the wildest places on Earth in search of plants. Yet in his article he turns his attention to a small, unassuming genus growing close to home in Washington State: Coptis.
Next, David Pearce, curator of Abbotsbury Subtropical Gardens, transports us to the cloud-shrouded mountains of Madeira to meet a striking architectural plant found nowhere else in the wild, and one that he’s been successfully cultivating on the Dorset coast.
And finally, Sacchi Parasrampuria and James Miller take us to Poon Hill in Nepal, reflecting on a recent plant observation trip and the lessons they brought back from the Himalayas.
Hosts: James Armitage and Gareth Richards
Contributors: Daniel J Hinkley, David Pearce, Saachi Parasrampuria, James Miller
Links:
The Plant Review
Heronswood Gardens
Abbotsbury subtropical gardens
Musschia wollastonii

Feb 26, 2026 • 32min
Rethinking rose pruning, self-sufficiency, and ornamental grasses
This week we join gardener and biologist Benny Hawksbee in his rose beds to find out how one small adjustment to the traditional rose pruning method can create vital habitat for a key aphid predator. RHS Garden Wisley’s Liz Mooney tells us about her journey to self-sufficiency, and horticulturist Rose Holman guides us through how to cut back your ornamental grasses before the new growth comes through.
Host: Josie Harris
Contributors: Benny Hawksbee, Liz Mooney, Rose Holman
Links:
Benny’s video on pruning roses
RHS guidance on pruning roses
Become a member of the RHS
Ornamental grasses

Feb 19, 2026 • 31min
Wet winter gardening, woodland walks and pruning wisteria
This week, we’re heading to RHS Garden Wisley to discover how its horticulturists are turning one of the wettest starts to the year on record into a garden that’s primed for spring. Team leader Helen Bensted-Smith shares some top tips for gardening in persistently soggy conditions, and explains why increasingly wet winters and dry summers are challenges we need to adapt to rather than battle against. Guy Barter takes us on a seasonal stroll through Oakwood, which is coming into its own at this time of year, and has plenty of take-home ideas for gardening in damp shade. And finally, we popped in to see Liam Anderson, who’s hard at work pruning the 75m Wisteria Walk. In just a few months, it will be transformed into a spectacular tunnel of cascading purple and white blooms.
Host: Nick Turrell
Contributors: Helen Bensted-Smith, Guy Barter, Liam Anderson
Links:
How to choose plants for seasonally wet and dry soils
RHS daffodil diaries
Sarcococca
Wisteria pruning video
Wisteria at Wisley

Feb 12, 2026 • 35min
The wildlife wonders of hazel, the science of winter wellbeing and hot crops from Wisley
This week, as its delicate catkins unfurl on bare branches, Digital Science Editor Olivia Drake introduces this month’s RHS Wildlife Wonder plant — the hazel – which not only supplies queen bumblebees with much needed early pollen, but also provides tasty nuts and abundant leaves to support a huge range of wildlife throughout the year. And while it may still be a little early to sow most crops directly outdoors, if you’ve got a greenhouse or warm windowsill you can get a head start on the growing season. Down at RHS Garden Wisley, Liz Mooney is busy sowing aubergines, sweet peppers and chillies, and she’ll be sharing her top tips for getting the best from these heat-loving crops. Finally, Professor Ross Cameron from the University of Sheffield – author of Plants Can Save Your Life – joins us to explore the science of plants and wellbeing, and how indoor gardening can play a powerful role in boosting our health.
Host: Guy Barter
Contributors: Olivia Drake, Liz Mooney, Ross Cameron, Gareth Richards
Links:
RHS Plants Can Save Your Life: How to live healthier and happier with plants
Wildlife wonder - hazel
RHS Grow Your Own

Feb 5, 2026 • 35min
Planning the perfect veg plot: heirlooms, tomatoes and what lies beneath
Now is a great time to start planning what to grow, and this week, we’re diving headfirst into the seed catalogues for inspiration! We’re exploring some of the tastiest, and most eye catching, additions to the veg patch: heirlooms! We also take a deep dive into tomato cultivars, as Liz Mooney shares her top picks from last years 'tomato extravaganza’ which saw her grow more than 50 varieties at RHS Wisley's world food garden. And finally, let's get back to basics with the foundation of any abundant veg plot: the soil! Nick Turrell and Jenny Laville dig into the ins and outs of how to care for earth beneath your feet.
Host: Gareth Richards
Contributors: Lucy Hutchings and Kate Cotterill from She Grows Veg, Liz Mooney, Jenny Laville and Nick Turrell
Links:
Mangelwurzel
Tomato Black Beauty
1,500 Year Old Cave Bean
Chicory Rose of Venice
Beetroot Red Toad
How to grow tomatoes

Jan 29, 2026 • 29min
Beyond peat
Mairi Longdon, plants person and grower at Tissington Nursery, shares practical peat-free nursery experience. Scott Spriggs, RHS peat-free research technician, explains trials and growing-media differences. Beth Thomas, conservation practitioner with Yorkshire Peat Partnership, outlines peatland protection and re-wetting. They discuss peatland value, peat-free growing challenges, practical watering and nursery transition tips.

Jan 22, 2026 • 33min
Wildlife-friendly gardening: winter edition
This week we’re rolling up our sleeves to look at how we can support our garden visitors, while also preparing for the burst of life that spring will bring. The RSPB’s Emma Marsh is back to share how monitoring projects like the Big Garden Bird Watch can make a real difference when it comes to helping our declining species. Gareth Richards pops in with his top tips for growing one of his allotment favourites (and a firm favourite with bumblebees too) the humble raspberry. And Olivia Drake shines a spotlight on the RHS Wildlife Wonders plant for January: the shrubby honeysuckle.
Host: Nick Turrell
Contributors: Emma Marsh, Gareth Richards, Olivia Drake
Links:
Sign up to the Big Garden Bird Watch
RSPB free guide and ID chart
How to grow raspberries
Why you need a shrubby honeysuckle in your garden


