If, like me, you are starting to think about Christmas through a haze of concern for our world, then it makes sense to buy gifts which support charities and companies that offer ethical and environmentally sound products. If you are buying for a fellow gardener or nature lover this year, here are some presents which could help you create a greener Christmas for friends and family…
1. Send a British Bouquet
Visit the Flowers From The Farm website (a not-for-profit network run by volunteers to support local UK flower growers) to find your local suppliers. I found our local flower farm on the website – The Baldock Flower Farm – a family run business selling local Hertfordshire flowers. A December bouquet with holly, mistletoe, festive flowers and foliage is sure to brighten even the dullest Christmas Day.
The website also has a area which lists flower events and workshops around the country. What better present for a flower-lover than the opportunity to learn more about growing their own cutting patch or creating a hand-tied bouquet?
2. The Gift of Inspiration
Books are fabulous gifts for all ages and can be revisited time and time again (although having spent 12 years as a English teacher I’m probably a bit biased!) My top pick for family gardeners this year would be the RHS Plants for Pips which my kids really enjoyed (I’ve reviewed it on the blog here). For ‘grow your own’ enthusiasts and those interested in environmental friendly gardening practices, I’d suggest Creating A Forest Garden by Martin Crawford. I’ve got it on loan from a friend at the moment, but it’s so good, I’ve requested my own copy for Christmas. It’s a comprehensive hardback with lots of information on how and why to set up a forest garden.
If Creating A Forest Garden is a little too detailed or pricey, I’ve also borrowed the paperbacks How To Grow Perennial Vegetables and Food From Your Forest Garden (also by Martin Crawford). Both are full of fascinating information about how to grow, harvest and use unusual plants. I particularly liked the photography in Food From Your Forest Garden and I can’t wait to try some of the inspiring recipes like ‘Iceplant with Peanuts and Coconut’. These, and many other environmental books, can be purchased online from Green Books – a publishing company which was launched in 1986 to help spread Green ideas and practices.
I’ve been indulging in a bit of botanical hygge with these inspiring books…
3. Donate to Others
Give a charity gardening donation such as planting an allotment with Oxfam to help others through gardening. Another gift which supports poor communities is Present Aid’s (Christian Aid’s charity gift shop) Floating Garden which provides seeds and training to families in Bangladesh to help them create floating gardens which can withstand the regular flooding which affects the country. This gift also makes a contribution to Christian Aid’s Climate Change Fund.
4. Feed the Birds
Birds are one of nature’s pest control mechanisms – eating snails, caterpillars and cabbage white butterflies. Giving the gift of a bird feeder, bird food, a nest box or a bird bath will help support the UK’s bird populations and reduce the need for chemical pest control in the garden. These days the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds recommends feeding birds throughout the year, rather than just in the winter, so that birds have a better chance of surviving food shortages whenever they may occur. Bird food and feeders are readily available in shops and online, but the RSPB’s online shop offers a good selection and supports their work protecting birds and habitats throughout the UK.

This Song Thrush is one of nature’s own pest controllers
5. Grow Your Own Festive Fungi
With the Espresso Mushroom Kitchen Garden from The Espresso Mushroom Company, you can give an edible gift to be grown on the biodegradable, recycled coffee grounds of one hundred espressos. This small Brighton based company aims to change people’s perception of ‘waste’ and demonstrate how it can be a useful resource. Three gifts in one: the Oyster mushrooms are fun to grow, they can be used a couple of weeks later to lift any Christmas leftovers to another level and the process creates a high grade, mushroom-enriched soil enhancer compost.
6. Go Perennial
Give a gift of perennial seeds, plants or tubers. Choosing some perennial fruit and vegetables in place of annual crops helps to reduce the impact of growing plants anew each year, with the associated energy costs of heating, compost and pots. I’m planning a perennial bed in the allotment next year (to add to the raspberries, Jerusalem artichokes, rhubarb, currants, strawberries and oca we already grow.) This will hopefully include crops such as Welsh onion, perennial kale, sea beet, yacon, wasabi, hardy ginger and ulluco to broaden our perennial range. Pennard Plants, Backyard Larder, Agroforestry Research Trust (set up and run by Martin Crawford) and Incredible Vegetables all have a good range of perennial plants and informative websites.
Jerusalem artichokes, Oca and Sea kale
7. Organise a Peat-Free Compost Delivery
We all know that using peat in compost is the antithesis to environmentally friendly gardening, but good peat-free compost can be hard to source at times. A delivery of compost, perhaps with a peat-free seed compost (something I find impossible to get locally) would be a great gift to start a year of green gardening. Suppliers of good quality peat-free compost include Dalefoot Composts (I’ve used their wool based composts for the past couple of years and been impressed with the quality), Carbon Gold Biochar Composts and SylvaGrow Composts (you can find your nearest stockist here or order online from garden stores such as Vale Gardens).
8. Book a Course at a Local Community Garden
There are hundreds of community growing spaces around the UK and many run short courses, like this one at my local community garden (the Triangle Community Garden in Hitchin) on growing fruit in the garden. Buying a course place as a gift is an ideal present as it leads to an accumulation of knowledge rather than ‘stuff’. Courses like these are great fun – not only do they encourage people to visit and get involved in local gardening initiatives, but they also support the community work as well. If you would like to find your nearest community garden, useful websites are The Federation of City Farms and Community Gardens, the RHS Communities, the BBC Community Gardening Projects and Garden Organic’s Local Groups and Gardens.

One of our popular ‘Grow Your Own’ workshops
9. Wind Up/Solar Gifts
A wind-up radio will create some Christmas cheer in the potting shed without using any extra energy. This wind-up, solar charged radio from the Natural Collection can be charged by the sun, by rechargeable batteries or with good old elbow grease. Or brighten up the winter garden with solar lighting from Lights4Fun (a family run business based in Harrogate whose good quality solar lights all have removable and replaceable batteries so a battery failing doesn’t necessitate throwing away the whole unit). I can’t resist a few fairy lights in the garden and find there is enough sun, even in winter, to power lights for some of the evening and create a sparkly Christmas atmosphere.
10. Give the Gift of Time
Give time rather than money by writing an original nature poem, framing a beautiful garden photograph or making a voucher for a couple of hours helping on a friend’s allotment. Christmas should be about spending time with those we love and a little time spent creating a bespoke gift adds a personal sparkle to Christmas Day.

Daddy’s Christmas poem written by my 7 year old with pictures coloured by my 4 year old
Most of the ideas and recommendations in this post are based on products or companies which have impressed me in the past when I’ve used them. The few which I’ve not tried myself have either been recommended by people whom I trust or have been internet finds (the only ones in this latter category are Green Books, Espresso Mushroom Company and Incredible Vegetables) where the online literature has impressed me and made me want to try their products myself. I hope you’ve found the ideas helpful – now I’m off to buy a few for my gardening friends this Christmas.
What green Christmas presents have you enjoyed receiving? What gardening books would you recommend for others this Christmas? Do leave a comment below and share your ideas with other readers – thanks 🙂
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What a host of interesting ideas – thank you.
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Glad you found them useful – I really enjoyed researching this post and it’s an issue I feel passionate about so I was hoping it would be a helpful post ☺
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I love the Christmas poem.
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The eldest is destined to be a poet methinks 🙂
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Thank you for doing some of my Christmas homework for me ! I have been meaning to research wind up radios to find a good one to give my husband … now I don’t need to!
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Great – hope he enjoys it 🙂
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Those lights look so funky and a reasonable price to!: definitely a must
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We’ve got a couple of lights from then on the past which we’ve been very happy with, including the Moroccan ball lights which are in the instagram photo which should be visible on the sidebar at the moment ☺
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There are so many great ideas here. I can imagine giving my parents the peat-free compost delivery 🙂
#mmbc
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Hi Catherine. Thanks for leaving a comment and I’m really glad you found the ideas useful 🙂
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Hi Nic, some fantastic gift ideas! It can be hard finding that gift that is a little bit different. I like the idea of growing your own festive fungi and anything to help feed the birds in winter is good too (although here in Greece there is plenty of food for the birds all year round).
I have bought my husband a solar radio for Christmas (don’t tell him though). It seems silly not to make the most of the sun if we can, not only for the environment but also because it’s free!
Thank you for linking up with the #MMBC.
xx
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Hi Debs. Glad you liked the Christmas ideas. I’m having fun trying out the mushroom kits for an Advent-ure at the moment – hoping for a good crop over December. If you’d like to see how they do, there’s a post on the blog and some vlogs on my Facebook page – http://www.facebook.com/mydogwooddays Have a great weekend 🙂
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