Bishy Barnabee’s Cottage Garden

Sow in May

The last frost passes — plant out and keep sowing

175 products
The Cosmos Purity by Bishy Barnabees Cottage Garden features a single white bloom with a yellow center, standing out against green foliage—ideal for moon gardens or adding stunning white flowers to your cutting garden.
Annual

Cosmos Purity

Cosmos bipinnatus 'Purity' White Cosmos 'Purity' The definitive…

Sow: Mar–Jun
£2.40 View

Sowing in May — your questions answered

What can I sow in May?

The last frost in most of the UK falls in early to mid-May, so everything tender can finally go outside. Sow direct: French beans, runner beans, courgettes, sweetcorn, squashes, pumpkins, salad leaves, beetroot, carrots, and most herbs. Plant out: tomatoes, cosmos, zinnias, and any half-hardy annuals you have raised under cover. Keep succession-sowing salads and quick crops.

When can I plant out my half-hardy seedlings?

Once nights are reliably above 8–10°C and the last frost has passed in your area. For most of the UK that's mid-May; in the South West and along the south coast you can sometimes plant out from late April; in Scotland and northern England, wait until late May or early June. Harden plants off gradually over a week before they go in.

Is it too late for hardy annuals?

Not at all — a May sowing of hardy annuals like cornflowers, calendula, and nigella will flower from late July through autumn, extending the season nicely. They won't be as tall or productive as autumn-sown plants, but they're still very worthwhile. Sow direct into well-prepared soil and water in gently.

What about pollinator-friendly plants?

May is an excellent month to sow plants for pollinators — borage, calendula, cosmos, phacelia, and verbena bonariensis all establish well now. They will be flowering by July or August, providing nectar through the critical late-summer gap when many garden flowers have gone over.