If you’re looking for recycled garden ideas, then this year’s RHS Chelsea Flower Show had them on almost every garden.
Recycling is a great money-saver, and it also gives a garden texture and character.
The show gardens at this year had a ‘green audit’ to encourage sustainable gardening. They were required to use sustainable materials and recycled items, wherever possible.
But I think that this has anchored the gardens in reality. They had ideas you’d want in your own garden (see here for this year’s other RHS Chelsea garden ideas).
And the show also struck a good balance between the structured, sometimes formal gardens of a decade ago and the ‘wilderness’ gardens of recent years.
So here is my pick of the best recycled garden ideas from the show, with tips on what to do if you want to try them out in your own garden.
Reclaimed timber for raised beds, sheds and seating
You can use reclaimed timber or pallets for fences, sheds, raised beds and seating, all found in several show gardens.
You can make a garden shed out of reclaimed timber, as with this hut in the National Garden Scheme show garden by Tom Stuart Smith. Find out more about building a shed from salvage in What Do You Need to Build a Unique Shed.
When buying or re-using pallets, check the codes stamped on the wood. Anything with IPCC (International Plant Protection Convention), DB (de-barked), HT (heat treated) and KD (Kiln dried) is safe to use. Never use pallets stamped with MB, because Methyl bromide is toxic.
And don’t use stained or coloured pallets as you won’t know what was used to stain or colour them.
You can get pallets and other reclaimed wood free through Freecycle, Freegle or sites like Facebook Marketplace.
If you’re using reclaimed wood outside, then it will need a protective water-resistant coating, such as Osmo UV Protection Oil to help prevent weather damage. Some water-resistant products will change the colour of the wood, so do a test patch first.
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Crushed concrete or brick as mulch!
When buildings are demolished, the result is a an aggregate of brick, concrete and even tiles.
This crushed rubble makes a good garden mulch. Or it can be used instead of gravel on paths.
Look online for ‘crushed builders rubble’, ‘crushed brick rubble’ or ‘crushed concrete rubble’. You should find some for sale near you.
An increasing number of garden designers are now using crushed brick, concrete or aggregate for mulches and paths.
Recycled garden ideas for paths and paving
You don’t have to buy everything new when you create a path or paved area.
And if you’re replacing a path or patio, you’ll have to pay to have the old pavers taken away.
So you can re-use some of what you’ve got, buy small batches of pavers in sales or source pavers being sold or discarded from other gardens.
Several show gardens at RHS Chelsea 2024 used a mix of pavers and gravel for their paths, most of which were recycled.
Look for bricks and pavers in architectural salvage or reclamation yards. In the UK, Salvo is a directory of salvage yards. Freecycle, Freegle and Facebook Marketplace may also be a good source.
More recycled garden ideas
There were several gardens using rocks at the show. Most were either recycled or were by-products of a manufacturing process.
Buying rocks can be expensive.
But anyone removing rocks from their garden or another site has to pay for their removal, so you can also find them free (if you take them away) on Freegle, Freecycle and Facebook marketplace.
There’s more about creating a rock garden (and finding rocks) here.
Recycled garden ideas in real gardens…
This post with 15 ways to transform your garden with upcycled junk has a list of the various ways you can buy thing to recycle or upcycle. This includes how to do swaps and exchange sites. It features my friend, Anna’s garden, which is decorated with quirky and intriguing upcycled things from offices, shops and more.
And see Kathy Pickering’s tips on finding things for free in this post on creating a rustic cottage garden on a shoestring budget .
She has used the frame of a sprung sofa as a trellis and using old bins and buckets for planters.
Pin to remember recycled garden ideas from RHS Chelsea 2024
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