Anna Dadson uses permaculture principles to get the most out of her vegetable garden. Photo / Jenny LingAnna Dadson uses permaculture principles to get the most out of her vegetable garden. Photo / Jenny Ling

Prepare garden beds with compost or manure such as horse poo or sheep pellets. Fork it into the top 15cm of soil then cover with weed-free mulch and plant into it as soon as possible. Give trees a light prune; Fertilise fruit trees with seaweed, organic fertiliser, or a light sprinkling of manure. Tend to your existing ‘green manure’ crop; plants like lupins, clover, oats, or mustard improve soil fertility and health. If you want to put a garden to rest as part of crop rotation, put in a green manure crop now.Spring is a great time to propagate, so grab your secateurs and take cuttings from friends. Plant pollinators; flowers like cosmos, calendula, allisum, and zinnias attract bees, parasitic wasps, moths and butterflies.

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