About this product
Full description
There's a particular moment in late October when the garden begins to shut down for winter — the borders going to bed, the perennials cut back, the bulbs already in, the soil itself bracing for the cold months ahead. The best gardeners use that moment to give their soil a proper tucking-in: a generous blanket of nutrient-rich compost spread thickly over the borders, insulating roots through frost and steadily feeding the soil all the way through to spring. WinterMix from Dandy's is exactly that — a peat-free, mushroom-compost-rich winter blanket for borders that you actually care about.
From Dandy's Topsoil, our trusted bulk-supply partners — specialists in topsoils, mulches, composts and garden aggregates. Available in seven sizes from small handy bags right through to a full cubic-metre jumbo.
What's in it
WinterMix is a properly serious three-ingredient blend, built specifically for late-autumn and winter application:
- Screened organic black compost — the base. Well-broken-down, friable, properly composted organic material that gives the mix its structure and slow-release nutrient backbone
- Organic mushroom compost — the warming heart of the blend. Well-rotted horse and chicken manure with straw, with the gentle alkaline character (chalk and lime from the mushroom-growing process) that brassicas, alliums and the wider vegetable patch genuinely appreciate. Mushroom compost is the proper traditional soil-warmer of the old British garden
- A dash of bark fines — just enough for the slight texture that holds the mulch together through winter rain, prevents it washing into the lawn, and adds slow-breaking-down longer-term organic matter
It's peat-free, as is the whole Dandy's range — they made the move to 100% peat-free long before the law required it of retail composts (which it has from late 2024). The mushroom-compost-led blend marks WinterMix out from the bark-fines-dominated SummerMix and the slow-release-feed-loaded AutumnMix; each seasonal mix has a different composition for a different functional priority.
Why winter mulching matters
Most gardeners know about autumn bulb planting; fewer realise that the genuine work of building winter soil happens through November, December and January. A proper winter mulch does several things at once:
- Protects roots from frost — the mulch acts as an insulating blanket, reducing soil-temperature swings between cold nights and warmer days. Particularly important for shallow-rooted perennials, fruit bushes, and any tender-borderline planting
- Feeds soil microbes through winter — worms, microbes and fungi continue working all winter at depth; the mushroom compost provides the slow-release nutrition they need to support healthy soil into spring
- Pre-loads the borders for spring — by the time April arrives, the mulch has been incorporated into the topsoil through worm activity, and borders bounce back into growth with significantly more vigour than unmulched ones
- Suppresses winter weeds — bittercress, groundsel and other winter weeds find it harder to colonise mulched ground
- Reduces compaction from heavy rain — the mulch breaks the impact of winter downpours that would otherwise compact bare borders
The unfashionable truth: gardens that get a generous winter mulch wake up in spring properly transformed compared to gardens that don't. Three or four years of consistent winter mulching builds the kind of deep, dark, alive soil that experienced gardeners quietly envy.
What it's for
- Late-autumn and winter border mulch — the headline use. Spread 5–10cm thick over existing borders from October through February for proper frost protection and slow nutrient release
- Around overwintering vegetables — kale, sprouts, leeks, garlic, broad beans, autumn-sown onions. The warming character protects the roots and steadily feeds the plants through their cold months
- Pre-planting bed preparation — spread thickly in November or December for spring-planted crops; the worms will have incorporated it by March
- Around bulb plantings — mulch over autumn-planted daffodils, tulips and alliums to protect them through deep frosts (which can heave bulbs out of the ground if soil is bare)
- Top-dressing fruit cages and orchard floors — an annual winter mulch around fruit trees and soft fruit bushes is one of the genuine garden labours that pays back over years
- Raised bed protection — raised beds lose heat faster than ground-level borders; a winter mulch significantly reduces that loss and protects overwintering crops
- Compost-heap top-up — a thin layer over an active compost heap helps maintain warmth and the microbial action through cold weather
The complete seasonal compost set
WinterMix completes our Dandy's four-mix seasonal range — the only properly thought-through year-round compost set we know of. Each mix is formulated for the season's specific job:
- SpringMix (Feb–May) — mushroom compost + bark fines + organic compost. The nutrient kickstart for borders waking up after winter
- SummerMix (May–Aug) — organic compost + bark fines. The moisture-retention mulch for keeping borders cool and moist through dry months
- AutumnMix (Sept–Dec) — organic compost + mushroom compost + sand + bark fines + 6-month slow-release feed. The autumn rebuild for bulb planting and pre-loading the soil for winter
- WinterMix (this, Oct–Feb) — organic black compost + mushroom compost + bark fines. The winter blanket for frost protection and steady cold-season feeding
Used through the year, the four give your garden the proper season-specific care that quietly compounds into properly fertile, properly structured soil within a few seasons.
When to use it
WinterMix is ideal from October through February — the months when borders need warming, feeding, and protecting:
- October to November — the prime application window. Borders cleared, perennials cut back, bulbs in, ground ready for the winter blanket
- December — still excellent timing if you missed earlier, particularly if a cold snap is forecast and you want to protect tender borderline plants
- January — for properly cold winters, an additional top-up over particularly vulnerable areas
- February — the latest sensible application; by March you're better moving to SpringMix for the spring kickstart
Apply when the ground is workable (not frozen solid or waterlogged). A mild, dry day in November is ideal — spread the mulch, let the worms do their slow work, and walk away.
Choosing your bag size
Available in seven sizes:
- Jumbo Bulk Bag — approximately 1000 litres (one cubic metre) — the largest, and the genuine best-value per litre
- Standard Bulk Bag — approximately 750 litres — the size most builders' merchants use
- Midi Bulk Bag — approximately 500 litres
- 40 × 25-litre Handy Bags — 1000 litres in carry-friendly bags
- 20 × 25-litre Handy Bags — 500 litres
- 10 × 25-litre Handy Bags — 250 litres
- 5 × 25-litre Handy Bags — 125 litres — for a single project or a few raised beds
The bulk bags are properly the best value if you have space for a pallet drop-off. The handy bags are the answer if you have access difficulties — narrow path, steps, an upstairs flat — since each 25-litre bag can be carried by hand.
A note on the mushroom compost — the pH question
WinterMix contains a generous proportion of spent mushroom compost, which is slightly alkaline (pH roughly 6.5–8.0 due to the chalk and lime in the mushroom-growing process). This is excellent for most garden situations — clay soils, vegetable plots, brassicas, asparagus, fruit trees, ordinary borders — but please avoid using WinterMix directly around ericaceous (acid-loving) plants:
- Rhododendrons and azaleas
- Camellias
- Blueberries, cranberries
- Heathers (Calluna and Erica)
- Pieris and other lime-haters
For these plants, use a peat-free ericaceous compost instead. If you have a mixed border with both ericaceous and ordinary plants, keep WinterMix away from the acid-lovers' root zones.
About Dandy's
Dandy's are our trusted bulk-supply partners — a long-established Welsh family business specialising in topsoils, mulches, composts and garden aggregates, supplied direct in bulk and handy bags. We stock their range because they do the unglamorous bulk products properly: well-screened materials, honest descriptions, sensible bag sizes for both serious gardeners and small projects. And because they made the move to 100% peat-free composts long before the law required it.
A small thought: there's something properly satisfying about a winter mulching session — the borders tucked under a dark blanket of mushroom-rich compost, the smell of organic matter in the cold air, the knowledge that you've quietly done one of the most useful jobs in the gardening year. Spring borders that come back twice as strong start with winters that get this kind of attention. Worth not skipping.
What's included
bag or 25L handy bag format.
Care and use
- Apply when ground is workable (not frozen solid or waterlogged)
- For mulching: spread 5-10cm thick over existing borders
- DO NOT use directly around ericaceous plants (rhododendrons, camellias, blueberries, heathers)
- Best applied October-February for proper winter protection

