Plant a nut tree for an unusual and beautiful addition to your kitchen garden. Nuts make a change from the usual apples and pears, and with their delicate spring blossom and good autumn colour they’re easily ornamental enough to provide a pretty focal point among perennials and shrubs. Plus you get a bumper harvest!
Now is the perfect time to plant them.
If you’re short of space, almonds make a good choice, growing into small trees about 3.5m (12ft) high with pretty pink spring blossom. Cobnuts can be pruned to a manageable 3m (9ft) each winter: look out for the varieties ‘Kentish Cobb’ and ‘Webb’s Prize’, which yield big, sweet nuts.
With a bit more room, you could try walnuts such as ‘Broadview’ or even sweet chestnuts: the old French cultivar ‘Marron de Lyon’ makes a spreading tree about 10m (30ft) high.
Nut trees, like fruit, prefer a sheltered spot with free-draining soil in full sun. Prepare the soil well and then plant so the tree sits at the same depth as it did in the pot. Support with a stake and tie, and water well in the first year or two while it establishes.