Growing-on small plants

Immature plants that can be grown on to flowering and cropping are the mainstay of most garden centres. They have done the difficult job of germinating the seeds and rooting the cuttings, providing you with the young plantlets for you to re-pot and nurture.
Plug plants
These tiny seedlings need potting on immediately after they are purchased. Fill a tray with a suitable compost and transplant the plugs 24 to a tray. Keep warm and well watered. After a few weeks transplant into larger quarters using a regular potting compost such as All Purpose Enriched Compost or John Innes No.3 Compost.
Bedding plants
Keep well watered and gradually harden off so the plants are ready for planting out in the garden at the end of May.
Improve the soil with plenty of organic compost and enrich with a controlled release plant food. Dig a hole to fit the roots and fill in with good soil.
Water the plants in with a solution of All Purpose Soluble Plant Food applied over the leaves and around the roots. This will encourage quick new growth and help the small plants to recover from transplanting shock.
Container grown plants
Young fruit trees and potted perennials appreciate a good deep soil enriched with organic matter and plant foods. Follow the instructions in the ‘beds and borders‘ section for complete success.
