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Gardening

Have you even had a gardener?

(33 Posts)
ExD1938 Wed 01-Jan-20 17:26:59

I broke my back in the summer and although the break itself has healed, and I am mobile, the pain is still with me and I'm weak as a kitten. I will not be gardening in the near future and have a HUGE garden which is my pride and joy.
I will need help.
Where would I find out if such people are available locally, and are they generally reliable and helpful? Do I give someone carte blanche or will he/she do as I ask?
And, very important - are they expensive?
Don't say get DH to do it - it ain't going to happen and anyway he doesn't know a rose bush from a compost-heap.

seasider Thu 02-Jan-20 09:39:21

Many years ago I was a single parent holding down two jobs. I only had a small garden but my pretentious neighbours moaned about the state of it. I did not have time to do it. I found a great gardener who charged me £10 a month and £20 at the change of the season when he put new plants in. I could ill afford to employ him but it was so nice to come home to a lovely garden. He also got lots of work off my neighbours. We were so disappointed when he moved on to doing large landscape type gardens.

henetha Thu 02-Jan-20 10:52:44

I've got a very part-time gardener who prunes the shrubs twice a year and then just if I need extra help with something.
He was recommended by my neighbour. He also cleans out the gutters etc.
Recommends are a good idea, for me anyway, as I had such difficulty finding a gardener who would actually turn up when he said, not charge exorbitant prices, and do a good job.

Grammaretto Fri 03-Jan-20 09:37:02

I think plenty of people feel as you do ExD about getting someone in but honestly, I feel it's as important as a plumber or a roofer. You are looking after the house and the garden. Perhaps more akin to a hairdresser as it is more cosmetic than critical but if you see the amount people spend in garden centres, money better spent, in my opinion on a skilled hand, who will show you how to take cuttings and make compost, and prune so you never need to spend a fortune at the GC ever again. smile
Asking the local garden club is an excellent idea.

My brother who loves his garden, but like you suffers dreadfully from his back, had 6 waist high raised beds built in his front garden with a hedge to screen them from the street and he grows all his vegetables as well as flowers for the house.

crazyH Fri 03-Jan-20 09:46:02

Don't pay by the hour - my opinion. I have a postage stamp size garden which I could easily do myself in half hour but for my severe allergies. My 'gardener' potters around, spends 2 hours and charges £20. His point is --- waste of his time and petrol, coming here for just half hour - fair enough.

tinaf1 Fri 03-Jan-20 19:53:50

There is a site called. Next door that you can go sign up to your local area and ask for recommendations, that’s how we found our gardener.

ExD1938 Mon 06-Jan-20 11:18:52

What lot of good advice and help.
Thank you, I'm starting making enquiries as soon as I finish reading these forums.

Ngaio1 Mon 06-Jan-20 13:20:19

Yes thank you! Mine did my mental health the world of good. Divine man ……..….!