🍓 February Fruit Gardening for Allotments
February is a key preparation month on allotments. While fruit plants are mostly dormant, the jobs you do now lay the groundwork for healthier plants, heavier crops, and less work during the busy months ahead.
Keter Manor Outdoor Apex Double Door Garden Storage Shed (6 x 8ft)
A durable and stylish beige and brown garden storage shed perfect for storing garden tools, equipment, bikes, and outdoor essentials. Weather-resistant, low maintenance, and ideal for any garden or allotment setup.
Seed Trays & Propagation Kits
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Heated Propagators & Grow Lights
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Seed Compost for Healthy Seedlings
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Allotment fruit gardening in February is about structure, soil care, and protection, not forcing growth.
⭐ Recommended Products — February Gardening Essentials
• Early Spring Seed Collection (February Sowing)
A pack of seeds suited for February sowing — think early onions, brassicas, tomatoes, chillies, and early flowers like pansies and primroses. Great for getting a head start on the growing season.
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• Seed & Cutting Propagation Compost
Fine, well-draining compost formulated for seeds and cuttings. Essential for giving young roots the ideal environment to establish strongly without rotting.
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• Seed Trays & Propagator Kit
Includes reusable seed trays, modules, and clear lids to create a controlled germination environment. Helps maintain humidity and protects young seedlings.
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• Heat Mat & Grow Lights for Seed Starting
Provides bottom heat and supplemental light — especially helpful in February’s low light and cooler temperatures to improve germination and early growth.
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• Plant Labels & Waterproof Marker Set
Keep track of your sowings with durable labels and a weather-proof pen — very useful when starting lots of different seeds in February.
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❄️ Why February Matters on Allotments
On allotments in February:
- Fruit plants are dormant and resilient
- Weeds are minimal
- Branch structure is easy to see
- Bare-root plants are available
- Soil can be improved without disturbance
Quiet, steady work now prevents rushed decisions later.
🌳 Prune Fruit Trees on Allotments
February is ideal for pruning pome fruit trees.
Suitable trees to prune now:
- Apple trees
- Pear trees
What to do:
- Remove dead, damaged, or diseased branches
- Cut out crossing or inward-growing growth
- Open the canopy for light and airflow
- Keep trees compact to suit allotment spacing
Avoid pruning stone fruit such as plums and cherries until summer.
🍇 Prune Fruit Bushes for Better Crops
Fruit bushes benefit greatly from February pruning.
🫐 Blackcurrants
- Remove old, dark wood at ground level
- Keep young, productive shoots
🍓 Redcurrants & Whitecurrants
- Shape into an open goblet
- Shorten side shoots to 2–3 buds
🟢 Gooseberries
- Open the centre to reduce mildew
- Remove overcrowded growth
🍇 Raspberries
- Cut autumn-fruiting raspberries to ground level
- Remove fruited canes from summer varieties
Correct pruning keeps bushes productive and manageable on shared sites.
🌱 Plant Bare-Root Fruit in February
February is one of the best months for planting fruit on allotments.
Good choices to plant now:
- Fruit trees
- Currants and gooseberries
- Raspberries
- Strawberries
Bare-root plants establish quickly and cost less than potted alternatives.
🌿 Improve Soil Without Digging
Allotment soils benefit from gentle improvement.
February soil jobs:
- Add compost or well-rotted manure as mulch
- Improve structure without digging
- Suppress weeds before spring
- Feed soil life, not plants
Healthy soil now supports strong fruit growth later.
🛡️ Protect Fruit Plants from Frost and Wind
Allotments are often exposed.
Protection tips:
- Mulch around roots
- Use fleece during severe cold
- Secure stakes and tree ties
- Shelter container-grown fruit
Protection prevents setbacks when spring growth begins.
🐛 Reduce Pests Early
February is ideal for prevention.
What to check:
- Aphid eggs on branches
- Mummified fruit left on trees
- Signs of canker or dieback
Removing problems now reduces infestations later — important on shared allotment sites.
🍓 Strawberry Care on Allotments
Strawberries benefit from early attention.
February jobs:
- Remove dead leaves
- Clear weeds from crowns
- Mulch lightly
- Replace weak or old plants
Healthy crowns mean better yields and less disease spread.
🧠 Plan Allotment Fruit Layouts
February is perfect for planning.
Useful planning tasks:
- Decide final tree and bush spacing
- Plan supports for raspberries and cordons
- Rotate strawberries if needed
- Order new fruit plants early
Good planning prevents overcrowding and disputes later.
❌ Allotment Fruit Jobs to Avoid in February
Avoid these common mistakes:
- Feeding with fertiliser
- Digging frozen or waterlogged soil
- Pruning stone fruit trees
- Forcing early growth
February is about preparation, not production.
🍓 February Allotment Fruit Rule
If fruit plants are dormant, focus on pruning, planting, soil care, and protection.
Strong foundations built in February lead to healthier allotment harvests all year.