Allotments bring rich harvests of fruit and veg but so often end up functional rather than beautiful to look at.
But it doesn’t have to be that way if you use ornamental edibles and pretty, scented herbs to enhance your plot, says gardening expert, author and YouTube star Huw Richards, head judge of Top of the Plots, a new competition celebrating the best in ‘grow your own’ culture, launched by Gardena with the National Allotment Society.
Gardeners can enter by submitting photos and descriptions of their garden plots or allotments via email, with selected categories.
Richards offers the following tips to make your allotment space prettier.
Go vertical
Consider water
“When you’ve got that reflection or slightly glistening water, it creates a calming feel. It’s fantastic for encouraging beneficial insects in your garden to help you with your natural pests and disease control.”
Use curves
Within your specific size of plot, create a curving pathway, almost like nodes. So you’ve got your main path and little nodes like keyholes that you step into and you plant each one up. You can have your herb node, your soft fruit node, your vegetable nodes. So you’ve got like different areas, but, but they’re all in circles or edges rather than straight lines, Richards suggests.
Play with texture
“You want to encourage some things to maybe spill over the sides, but you want to make sure that they don’t quite take over. It’s like stealth maintenance.”
Let some of your veg flower
“Parsnips produce a 1.8m high, amazing umbelliferous flower. Leeks produce big allium flowers which are bumble bee magnets. This also contributes to having a more vertical layer within the garden.”
Carrots also produce frothy flowers and you can now buy ornamental carrot varieties in different colours, Richards says.
Make the most of herbs
“It has quite tall flower spikes and you can get it in blues, purples and whites. The good thing about perennials like that is they come really early.”
Consider flowers
Growing cut flowers on allotments is becoming popular, he says.
“I love growing different types of amaranth because of the beautiful flowers and structural texture. Amaranthus ‘Hot Biscuits’ is really cool and different. If you want to go for perennials, peonies are fantastic, and you can’t go wrong with sweet peas.”
Install seating
“To make allotments a nice place you have to have some kind of seating area. A lot of people miss out because they turn the allotment into a chore where there’s one job, which is to grow veg.
“Actually, you have an opportunity to enjoy it beyond the single utility of producing wood. Even if you had two logs and a plank of wood over it and a little coffee table, you want a spot to sit and relax and enjoy it.
“Are you someone that likes reading, or to crochet or to journal? If you got an allotment, create a little space for that and plant around it. You could have a simple arbour with a honeysuckle. The more that you get into your garden, the more healthy, maintained and beautiful it’s going to be.”
How to enter the competition
1. Six high-quality photos showcasing your garden or allotment
2. A short description highlighting your growing journey, plant variety, sustainability practices and maintenance efforts
3. Your selected category
The awards categories are: Best Allotment, Best Garden Plot; Best New Plot; Kids on the Plot; Best Small Plot; Biodiversity on the Plot; and Best Community Plot.
The competition has £1,000 of Gardena products and RHS vouchers. The first 100 entrants will also receive Top of the Plots merchandise and a champion’s plaque.
Entries close in August 2025, with finalists announced in early September.
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