🌿 Front Garden Transformation COMPLETE! | Tropical-Style Garden Tour UK 🌴 🌿

After months of planning and hard work, our tropical-style front garden renovation is FINALLY complete! In this video, we take you on an exclusive tour of our finished front garden in Hampshire, UK. If you’re passionate about creating an exotic garden oasis with lush, jungle-style planting, this is the video for you!

🏡 What You’ll See in This Video:
✅ A full before-and-after transformation of our tropical front garden
✅ Stunning hardy exotic plants perfect for the UK climate
✅ Design tips for making a front garden look lush, tropical, and inviting
✅ How to use palms, bananas, tree ferns, and architectural plants for impact

Whether you’re an experienced gardener or just starting out, this video is packed with tropical gardening inspiration to help you create your own exotic paradise in the UK. Don’t forget to LIKE, COMMENT, and SUBSCRIBE for more videos on hardy tropical plants, jungle-style gardening, and UK garden makeovers!

#TropicalGarden #UKGardening #ExoticPlants #JungleGarden #GardenTour #TropicalPlants #HardyTropicals #FrontGarden #GardenInspiration #HampshireGardening

6 Comments

  1. Hi there. Just found you! Please tell me what your big green topiary balls are. No doubt you cover it in some of your other videos but I’m just about to start with your wonderful backlog catalogue. 🌳

  2. Fantastic job, super jealous and definitely inspired me to have a go myself!

    I see you mentioned mounding up your butia with top soil and mixed sand, and I'd like to know if that's a similar situation in your back garden for most of your raised tropicals or did you use any other specific soil type or soil mix.
    I'm trying to do a similar ish style of tropical garden with tall palms, yuccas, phormiums, bananas, the lot…
    I live in on a hill side where it rains frequently and got quite compacted clay ish soil so i'm going the raised border route to give my tropicals a better chance at keeping up with the wet weather (drainage is my main focus as I don't have any issues with dry soil in summer but wet winters are the main problem).
    I'm a bit overwhelmed at what soil I should use to raise them up, I was thinking loam with mixed sand, or maybe john ines n°3 but that would be quite expensive?
    Hope you can shine a light on my dilemma as im quite interested in your opinion 🙂
    Thank you.

    And If you feel like it you could even do a video about it to help out other people in a similar situation ^^

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