I know that within the next few years we will likely move house. We have put a lot into our garden which will be the hardest aspect of our home to leave. For our house move we are hoping to find a smaller house and a bigger garden!
Many of our plants were given to us as gifts or donated by our family in the early days of living here. Others are gifts we have given each other or have particular memories. So we are reluctant to leave these plants.
However, I do not know what type of garden we will be moving to the aspect, or even exactly the soil type. This does not bother me too much though as I know most will be adaptable or live happily in large pots or containers.
So I know that the plants I want to take that thrive here will be perfectly fine in a new home.
However, if you are moving to an area with a very different soil type and do not want to look after container plants you may need to think carefully about which plants you take with you.
Removing Plants From Your Garden When Selling
First, though I had to consider the ethical question of is it right to remove loved plants from a garden you are selling?
Buyers will view our house and garden as it is and understandably expect it to come with all the plants they see upon viewing.
Someone once told me that to know what you can take and what you can leave you should imagine your garden turned upside down. anything that drops off you can take, otherwise it should stay! So really anything rooted in the ground stays but containers and cuttings and seeds can be removed.
My opinion is that it is acceptable to remove plants and take cuttings as long as you are upfront with the buyers about which plants you are totally removing.
I think it is unacceptable to buy a house and then find upon arrival that half of the plants you thought you were also buying have been dug out changing the look and feel of the garden.
I have learned that it is important to check as inground plantings are often considered part of the property or a fixture. So if you are planning to remove a significant proportion of plantings or obvious plant from your garden it is best to indicate those exclusions in the listing process. If it is decided later than this to remove planting, an amendment should be made with the buyers agreement. It is always best to fully disclose exactly what you are planning to take from the garden. Do always check the law/rules in your country/state exactly the situation when selling.
I have learned that it is important to check as inground plantings are often considered part of the property or a fixture. So if you are planning to remove a significant proportion of plantings or obvious plant from your garden it is best to indicate those exclusions in the listing process. If it is decided later than this to remove planting, an amendment should be made with the buyers agreement. It is always best to fully disclose exactly what you are planning to take from the garden. Do always check the law/rules in your country/state exactly the situation when selling.
Five Options To Move House With Your Garden Plants.
An increasing number of sellers are taking special plants with them when they move house.
So if you want to take your treasured plants and sell the house and garden honestly, what can we do? Here are five possible solutions.
1. Dig Up Plants And Move Into Containers Before Selling.
At least a year or so before you plan to move if possible, make a plan to dig up and move any treasured plants you must take with you into pots. Before the sale begins put these pots to one side or outside the garden. Make it clear in the selling instructions or listing that anything in a container is an exclusion, not part of the house sale.
This may work for plants that are not too big. For me, this includes several treasured roses, a small Camellia and a few small evergreens.
Small herbs are coming with me, two of our strawberry plants and a couple of our many Heucheras.
Our garden is so packed full of shrubs, perennials, bulbs and other plants that these will not be noticed from the overall plan. However, you need to plan ahead for this as certain plants can only be moved with the least disruption to the plant at specific times of the year.
2. Take Cuttings Of Your Plants And Gather Seeds Before Selling Your Home
However, some plants are simply too big to move in this way and would leave massive gaps in the garden if I took them with me which would not be fair.
For example, our beautiful Camellia and our gorgeous climbing rose. It would take an enormous effort to dig them up, may, in fact, kill the plant and would leave a gap in planting that would look very wrong in the garden.
In addition, they are used every year for birds to nest.
I do not want to take this valuable resource away from the wildlife.
I do not know if the new buyers will want them and I really hope they will keep them. I would be devastated if they felled them, but they are not practical to move.
So what I have done is to take cuttings of the camellia and the rose.
This way I can take a little of the plant and grow it on to become just as gorgeous as its parent.
No one will notice cuttings taken and it will not change the look of the garden or any current benefit to wildlife.
I am also taking cuttings of our laurels, some of the roses, fuchsias, forsythia, rosemary our large wegelia and bridal bouquet.
It is important to start this process as soon as you think about moving. For many plants, there is an optimum time to take cuttings. If they do not take one year you will want to have another year to take them so ideally start as early as you know you are moving.
Taking cuttings will save us a huge amount of money and leave the garden still beautiful for the buyers and available for the wildlife.
3. Negotiate With Buyers About The Plants.
This is an option if you would like to take certain plants with you and have not had time to pot them up before viewings.
When you have a firm offer check with the buyers if they would mind if you took the plant. Some won't mind at all, others may refuse, so this is riskier but still worth asking.
Seek advice from your Realtor or Estate agent before taking this course of action. This may need to be negociated and added as an exclusion in the sale agreement.
4. Ask Buyers If You Can take Unwanted Plants.
Ask the buyers if they plan to or later decide to get rid of any plants to let you know and you will collect them. It is probably better if the new buyers who are now the homeowners actually dig up the plants and you just collect them otherwise there could be misunderstandings.
This only works if you remain local and if the buyers actually remember to contact you. I feel this is the least likely strategy to work and could incur issues that may not be worth it.
5. Take Photographs Of Your Garden And Plants
If there are treasured plants that you cannot take with you for whatever reason then take a photograph. We can then carry the memory of the plant with us.
We can even get the photographs made into posters, greeting cards, or canvas prints such as the one below.
Tools For Taking Plant Cuttings And Moving Plants
All you need in order to take cuttings is a strong pair of secateurs such as these Wolf ByPass Secateurs.
You will also need some good quality compost for full grown plants and cuttings and however many pots of different sizes you think you will require.
Labels are also a good idea so you can tell what all the cuttings are.
I like to have a variety of sized pots. I reuse every pot that comes into our garden so none ever go into landfill.
For the purpose of moving larger treasured plants I have bought a few larger planters in different sizes for the plants I am taking with us. I would recommend ones with handles so that they are easier to move. Once they are served their purpose they will be reused for vegetable growing forever.
Advantages To Taking Your Existing Plants
1. You take treasured plants, especially those with special significance and memories with you. These are valued things you may not be able to bear to leave behind.
2. You save significant amounts of money on replacing favorite plants. Plants are so expensive now so if you can take cuttings and seeds, especially it will save you a lot of money.
3. You have continuity to settle in a new place. Familiar plants may help you to settle more easily.
4. You can easily stock an empty garden for very little financial outlay. Gardens take time to develop so if you have some plants ready you are ahead.
Disadvantages To Taking Your Plants
1. Your new garden may be very different from your existing one and your plants may not suit or fit the place and the soil type and aspect may be different. For example from heavy clay to chalk. Or South to North facing.
2. You may want a totally new start with fresh, maybe very different plants or garden theme. For example a change from cottage garden to modern minimalist.
3. You may be moving to a garden that is already well-stocked with plants you love.
4. You may be moving to a place with a balcony or courtyard your existing plants will not fit into or be happy living there.
So as an avid gardener who loves her plants I am seeking a happy medium. We are taking some treasured plants and taking cuttings and seeds of others we want. I aim to pot up all those we are taking before the house goes on the market and be upfront with buyers that anything in a container will not be staying.
We have put such a lot into this garden from an empty patch to a vibrant, full and wildlife-friendly paradise. It will be a wrench to leave, but that won't be for quite a while yet and when the time comes I know I will look forward to taking some of the treasured memories with me and creating a new garden.
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