As high temperatures continue in the UK, we asked three RHS horticulture advisors, Nikky Barker, Julie Henderson and Adrian Thorne, their views on what the drought means for gardens in the UK and how gardeners need to be adapting to the changes in climate in the short and long term.
The answers may surprise you: whilst being careful with what you water is an important element of their message, it’s just the beginning of what we can be doing to adapt in the long-term to the extremes of temperature that we are seeing at the moment.
If you have a garden in the UK you should be thinking about several things, including how to build a resilient garden, with plants that can withstand heat and drought, how to save water and how to care for your soil.
Don’t miss our piece on dry garden planting combinations and read more on water saving in garden design.
How bad is this year’s drought?
There is a severe drought in the south east. At RHS Bridgewater further north, there’s been extensive hot weather and much less rainfall than normal. We are seeing greater extremes because of climate change. Hot events were predicted to be very infrequent, but they are happening much more often than expected and for longer and longer.
Ten to 20 years ago a garden would have had more recovery time, but because the hot weather is longer and more frequent, gardens have to work harder. An exceptionally dry spring meant our rainfall became more concentrated. That’s a problem too, because if rain comes all at once it doesn’t soak into the ground and you get runoff.
What are the long and short term effects of this sort of weather on the garden and wildlife?
A lot of plants will have shorter flowering time. The changes in the temperature earlier in the year could mean there’s not the right plants for when the pollinators need them. Insects adapt much slower to climate change, so where flowers are coming out earlier, insects may be missing out on their food source. And that also has an effect on fruit and veg too – less fruit and vegetables for domestic growers.
Some plants, like hydrangeas, are very susceptible to drought. They need consistently moist soil and are going suffer with the lack of water. Acers too, like a sheltered garden spot, but this weather is scorching the leaves. Cherries need a period of cold in the winter, but if they aren’t getting that then you will see reduced amounts of fruit.
We rely on microorganisms in the soil to keep it healthy, but when it’s very dry, things like worms go very deep, a metre down, to where it is moist. So they won’t be having the same beneficial effect on the soil.
As the climate changes, there will be a change in disease and fungus. They will be able to survive where they hadn’t in the past. There may be some coming from the continent. If you are changing plants, look for something that will be resilient to possible diseases.
Adapting to drought in the garden: what gardeners should be doing
Lawns
- Lawns are a terrible waste of water and the typical urban grass that we consider to be a lawn is poor for pollinators.
- Pick the right grass mix: there are fine lawns and utility lawns. The fine lawns are not good at coping with drought, the grass seed in utility lawns is much better at adapting. Choose your seed mix carefully.
- Don’t cut your lawns too short: lawns are much more drought resistant the longer they are.
- A brown lawn will grow back once the rains come again. If you’re watering in your garden now, don’t water your lawn.
Watering
- Be very selective in what you’re choosing to water. If you think something will survive, leave that and focus on newly planted things.
- Water right to the roots. Never have a hosepipe spraying on the whole border. It will sit on the leaves and evaporate.
- Water with a watering can – it will make your watering more targeted.
- Install a water meter. You’ll be more likely to use water wisely.
- Install rain water butts from your house drainpipes.
- Use grey water – recycled water from washing machines and baths – only on established plants and not on fruit and veg.
- Water in the morning or evening when it’s cool, otherwise you will loose lots to evaporation. Here’s more on when to water in hot weather.
Mulch
Mulching really helps in the long term. It is done mainly in the autumn. Cover the soil with anything from compost to bark. It will keep the moisture in the soil, stopping it evaporating. Bare soil is the enemy of plants. Having it mulched will also help protection from the much stronger winds that we’re seeing through the spring and summer. It will reduce erosion and water loss. Here’s our guide on how to mulch.
Heavy rainfall
With the drought also comes increasingly heavy, focused rainfalls. Plan for these by creating rain storage from the run off.
Change your planting
Gardeners have to adapt, but we have been doing this for centuries. Start considering more drought tolerant plants and look to Mediterranean planting. There are lots of exciting plants that couldn’t be overwintered here a few years ago, but now they can – like lemon trees.
If a plant hasn’t survived drought, don’t replace it with the same thing. Choose something that is more resilient. Annuals are usually very tolerant – such as nasturtiums and love-in-a-mist. Choose things that will self seed as they will choose when the time is right to germinate.
Here’s our list of the best drought tolerant plants.
Don’t mollycoddle your plants
If you have two genetically identical plants and put one on poor soil and the other on rich soil and only water the one on poor soil when it is first planted, the one that adapts to climate change best will be the one in poor soil. Choose the right plants and toughen them up. Studies have chosen that if you give a plant less water then it adapts to needing less water.
Anti-intervention is the name of the game
We have to be less manipulative and we have to work with the soil and plants that we have. Improve the soil as much as you can without using artificial fertilisers and irrigation. Be more pragmatic: if you have clover on your lawn, you can still walk on it.
Great examples of dry gardens in the UK
This year’s Hampton Court had several gardens which were worth looking at. The Planet Friendly Garden and the Turfed Out garden. There’s no turf in it, it’s all made from recycled materials.
Beth Chatto’s Garden was planted in a car park and she watered the plants when she first planted them, but hasn’t watered them since. It looks stunning. The dry garden at Hyde Hall works on the same principal. Look to the east. The east of the country is dryer than the west so they are ahead of the game in terms of what we have to think about.
Read more about what a drought means for gardeners in the UK