Tips on how to select Christmas gifts for gardeners - plus, find out what else needs doing in the garden this week.

By Hannah Stephenson


What do you give the gardener who has everything? Perhaps a luxurious back and neck massage to ease those endless hours of digging? Or perhaps a good manicure to file away all that grime from under the nails?

Let's face it though, not many gardeners actually do have everything, a garden always needs something new - which makes finding a gift this Christmas that little bit easier.

You don't have to go big - a few pretty plant labels in, say, slate or terracotta, a selection of seeds to keep them busy in the New Year, some stationery with fruit or veg patterns or simply a new pair of secateurs to help them through spring pruning may go down well.

There's a plethora of personalised gifts for the gardener - check out www.gettingpersonal.com for a selection of calendars, diaries, crates and even shed signs that can be personalised to feature the recipient's name.

If you're looking to replace bog standard basics with more stylish ones, consider a new watering can and matching plant pots from Fallen Fruits, which offers a pretty patterned set of a can and three plant pots for £20 (www.qvcuk.com or phone 0800 50 40 30).

Burgon & Ball also has stylish new ranges of forks, trowels, kneelers and other accessories, endorsed by the Royal Horticultural Society. I particularly like the Chrysanthemum pattern, taken from the striking illustration of Chrysanthemum 'Karashishi' by the Japanese artist K Hasegawa, dating from 1891 and taken from the RHS's Lindley Library.

The trowel and fork come in a beautiful printed box, featuring painted handles printed with the RHS logo and an engraving of the Gertrude Jekyll quote, 'The love of gardening is a seed once sown, that never dies' on the body of the trowel. Priced £19.95, they're available from all good garden centres, RHS plant centres and www.burgonandball.com.

Gardeners who want to match their stylish new tools may want to chuck out their old wellies in favour of some natty new Kew Sprig ankle wellies from Cath Kidston. They don't just look good, they are snug too, whether on the allotment, trudging through the snow or on their way to a summer festival. Made of rubber with a cotton inner, priced £35 in sizes 4-8, for stockist details visit www.cathkidston.com.

For new vegetable gardeners Mr Fothergill's Get Growing range of seeds (£1.60 - £3.15) and kits, including herb pots (£1.49), starter collection boxes (£8.49) and mini windowsill propagator kits (£3.29) will make ideal stocking-fillers. For details go to www.mr-fothergills.co.uk.

For those who might want to attract wildlife to their garden, tell them to put the new BeeMat on their Christmas list. It's a biodegradable, pre-seeded growing mat containing mixed flower seeds which aim to attract bees, including verbena, Californian poppy and borage among other varieties, and is available to plant from spring. As well as providing colour, the mat will also suppress weeds. For stockists visit www.beemat.com or call 01476 530374.

If you know a gardener who gets peckish while working in the garden, a selection of luxury biscuits in quirky tubes of 'Keep Calm' gardening themes may make the ideal gift. The tubes can be used to store plant labels, string and other gardening sundries long after the biscuits have been eaten (triple pack £13.99, www.thompson-morgan.com/ 0844 573 1818).

Gardeners who prefer to make their own produce may opt for an unusual new cheese-making kit from Suttons (www.suttons.co.uk/christmas), featuring everything you need to make fresh mozzarella and ricotta in under an hour, adding your own freshly grown herbs and spices to the cheeses. The kit has enough to make 10 batches and each batch weighs around 2lbs - that's a lot of cheese for a kit costing £19.99.

Ornamental owls may have made their mark in the garden in the past couple of years, but now other animals are also gaining momentum. A new collection of solar powered metal silhouette animals including an elephant, horse, hare, peacock, duck, swan, pheasant, heron and cockerel cast both light and interesting shadows at night. Each contains an integral solar panel that powers a rechargeable battery that lights either a white LED or a colour changing LED at night. Ranging in price from £24.99 to £39.99, they are available from most leading garden centres. For details go to www.smartsolar.com.

Those who want to attract real wildlife into their garden can do so with a striking new Echoes bird bath from Suttons, a sturdy glazed ceramic piece in shades of dusky pink, brown and green, with matching feet. the first verse of William Blake's Auguries of Innocence is inscribed around the edge. (£24.99, www.suttons.co.uk/christmas or 0844 922 0606)

If your loved one is more interesting in entertaining guests around the Christmas table than entertaining bird life, look no further than a dazzling miniature azalea tree from Thompson & Morgan. The present features a double-flowered evergreen azalea (height 50-60cm/20-24in) shaped like a mini Christmas tree, branches laden with buds, delivered in a pot. The plant comes in either red or white (£39.99, www.thompson-morgan.com/ 0844 573 1818).

A sure-fire win for any gardener is an annual pass with the National Trust (www.nationaltrust.org.uk) to allow visitors to wallow in inspirational gardens, or an RHS membership (www.rhs.org.uk) which includes free garden visits, discounted show tickets and a monthly magazine. If they want to just increase their knowledge, opt for membership of Garden Organic (www.gardenorganic.org.uk) for access to specialist advice, reduced costs to join its Heritage Seed Library and free entry to RHS gardens.


Best of the bunch - Pampas grass (cortaderia)

It was planted to excess in the 1970s but this lovely ornamental grass with ostrich-feather flowers has become popular again, mainly because it is extremely hardy and drought-tolerant and makes an excellent stand-alone specimen or at the back of a border with other tall grasses. Among the largest pampas cultivars, C. selloana 'Sunningdale Silver' can top 3m (10ft) with large white flower plumes that stand straight and tall and can withstand some of the worst weather. If you want a smaller type, C. selloana 'Pumila' is a plain green dwarf, rarely reaching 2m (6ft) and bearing long-lasting flowers. It is also less vigorous than other types and mixes better with other plants. You can even have variegated pampas grass, such as the cultivar 'Silver Comet', which appears silver from a distance and has short flower stems. Pampas grass thrives in open, sunny spots with free draining soil.


Good enough to eat - Protecting cauliflowers

Now is the time to protect the curds of cauliflowers you've grown before they become damaged by frost. You do this by bending the inner leaves over the curd and tying them with string, or by pegging them together to secure them in place to keep the cauliflower white and delay the time when the flowers will open up. When the developing curds form a dense, tightly packed area that looks full size, cut it off just below the base of the head retaining some of the outer leaves for protection in transit. If you wait too long, individual florets will shoot out and spoil the shape of the head. Once that happens they will open out into flowers and then you will lose your cauliflower. Good varieties include 'Purple Cape', a reliable winter variety with deep purple heads, and 'Romanesco', a lime-green type.


What to do this week

:: Move bowls of bulbs which are being forced for indoor flowering into a light but cool position when the leaves are around 2.5cm (1in) high.

:: Shorten hybrid tea roses and floribundas to lessen windrock damage.

:: Cut back a third of the summer's growth on hardy fuchsias, leaving the rest of the stems as winter protection.

:: Protect newly-planted evergreens with a temporary windbreak until they have become established. Take hardwood cuttings from cornus, salix, ribes, roses, gooseberry and currants.

:: Lift and store swede and turnip for winter use.

:: Place forcing jars over clumps of rhubarb to encourage healthy stems for picking.

:: Check plants which you have stored in the greenhouse, including pelargoniums and fuchsias, removing any dead or yellowing leaves.

:: Prepare beds for planting new asparagus in late winter.

:: Remove old crops, clear weeds and dig in garden compost - if the soil isn't frozen.

:: Spread straw around the base of tender climbers to provide extra protection from the cold.

:: Firm soil that has been lifted by the frost around newly planted specimens.

:: Write off for seed catalogues and place orders for potatoes, onion sets and shallots.

:: Fork over bare patches in the flower bed between plants, to stop soil compaction.