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Midsummer isn’t the best time for planting, but it’s great for planning

Lifestyle
June 26, 2026 · 1:31 PM
Midsummer isn’t the best time for planting, but it’s great for planning

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A lot of useful thinking can be done while sitting – perhaps with a glass of something cool. Photograph: Purepix/Alamy

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A lot of useful thinking can be done while sitting – perhaps with a glass of something cool. Photograph: Purepix/Alamy

Gardening advice

Midsummer isn’t the best time for planting, but it’s great for planning

Figuring out how to best use a shady nook or sunny patio is easiest when the light is strongest

Alice Vincent

Fri 26 Jun 2026 06.00 EDT Last modified on Fri 26 Jun 2026 06.05 EDT

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T he summer solstice is behind us: where did the year go? But the next few weeks are still a good time to work out where your sunny spots actually are, and where they’re not. And that’s helpful for plotting out everything you might want to do and grow in your garden.

Last June, I was desperate to peer at our future garden so I could figure out just this. We hadn’t exchanged contracts on the place yet and my husband pointed out that the young people who were then renting it would probably refuse me access on the grounds of being weird. Perhaps they would! But I still wanted to see where the sun fell.

I’ve racked up a higher looking-at-to-working-on ratio in this garden than any other. It’s been a slow-burn love affair and I must say I’ve really enjoyed it. The grass has grown long, we’ve trodden a desire path down the middle. I’ve hung a lot of laundry out here. I’ve spent a good while getting to know the place.

Make a note of plants you’ve admired in other gardens, beautiful paving and other clever ideas

In recent weeks, I’ve started to draw up design plans and get down on paper my ideas for what the garden could be. None of these are good enough for public consumption, but they’re helping me to play with ideas that I know will change – a good, well-loved garden evolves all the time.

High summer isn’t a good time for planting things, as I’ve been saying lately, but it is a good time to examine what you want from your garden and how well it is serving your needs. My husband and I love to host, but we’re terrible barbecuers, so I have no need of an outdoor kitchen here. What we lack is somewhere to sit, good hideyholes for the children, and I’m desperate for some proper shade.

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Want to bring summer joy to your garden? It’s not too late to sow nasturtiums Read more

Perhaps you find yourself gathering at a secluded spot rather than on the patio? Or maybe you’re finding it a chore to trundle down to the end of the garden when you want to eat outside. Is your herb patch in the right place, and your compost bin? Think about these sort of things when you’re using your garden and make a list of what’s working – and what’s not. Draw a little rudimentary map of where the sun comes, and when (you think you’ll remember, but you won’t).

Stash your notes away. Make a Pinterest board of plants you’ve admired in other gardens, beautiful paving and other clever ideas. If you’re finding some plants demand endless watering, perhaps they’re not ones for next year. What if you were to let some of those “volunteer” self-sown plants thrive instead?

Such useful thinking can be done while sitting with a glass of something cool in hand. Come September, you can return to your notes and start making plans. Next June, just imagine where you might be.

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Comments (11)

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Guardian Pick

What a week! All I have managed to do is to keep the birds water supply topped up and my tiny pond clear of debris. It has been too hot for bees and hoverflies as they are nowhere to be seen although plenty of blue and greenbottles. There a more than a dozen juvenile starlings squabbling over the suet pellets and fat balls which are eaten just before they melt in the heat. Some of the perennials (fuchsia, geraniums) have to be watered more fre…

Jump to comment

hmswarspite19152 hours ago

2

Guardian Pick

Despite it not being the best time to plant our neighbour is nagging us to

replant our shared double front wall. It’s planted with Hebe, vivid purple

magenta and pink which neither of us pruned, which has gone leggy and looks

awful. Our garden center is expecting to have new season Hebe in a a couple

of weeks so hopefully the weather will have cooled down by then.

The dividing wall will be planted up with Mahonia as it…

Jump to comment

HelenAmsterdam2 hours ago

1

Guardian Pick

What a week! All I have managed to do is to keep the birds water supply topped up and my tiny pond clear of debris. It has been too hot for bees and hoverflies as they are nowhere to be seen although plenty of blue and greenbottles. There a more than a dozen juvenile starlings squabbling over the suet pellets and fat balls which are eaten just before they melt in the heat. Some of the perennials (fuchsia, geraniums) have to be watered more fre…

Jump to comment

hmswarspite19152 hours ago

2

Guardian Pick

Despite it not being the best time to plant our neighbour is nagging us to

replant our shared double front wall. It’s planted with Hebe, vivid purple

magenta and pink which neither of us pruned, which has gone leggy and looks

awful. Our garden center is expecting to have new season Hebe in a a couple

of weeks so hopefully the weather will have cooled down by then.

The dividing wall will be planted up with Mahonia as it…

Jump to comment

HelenAmsterdam2 hours ago

1

View more comments

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