The Bristol business providing affordable gardening-themed boxes

The Bristol business providing affordable gardening-themed boxes

Posted on: 18 Mar 2024

Get ready to get your hands dirty, because a Bristol business has just launched a brand-new Gardening Box subscription.

 

Aimed at both kids and grown-ups alike, this handy box of gardening essentials slides right through your letterbox each month, packed to the brim with everything you need for at least two seasonal growing activities. Inside, you'll find plenty of useful bits including seeds, peat-free compost ready for immediate planting, and detailed instruction cards to guide you every step of the way. Each box also throws in a bunch of gardening tasks tailored to the month and a nifty nature spotter, ensuring you and your little ones can revel in your outdoor space all year long.

 

Mud & Bloom also seem to, appropriately, be concerned with the sustainability of their boxes. Their seeds and compost are organic whenever possible, and the instruction cards are printed in the UK using a zero-landfill, zero-carbon waterless process. Plus, every box is totally plastic-free, recyclable, and biodegradable, so you can nurture your garden guilt-free.

Coming up in Mud & Bloom’s March gardening box: organic beetroot seeds, wildflower seed bombs, and help spotting the beautiful wildflowers popping up. Whilst M&B already provide a box with a mixture of gardening and craft activities, this stripped-back box is perfect if you have a real focus on green thumbs – or even just a skinny wallet.

 

Whilst M&B already provide a box with a mixture of gardening and craft activities, this stripped-back box is perfect if you have a real focus on green thumbs – or even just a skinny wallet. It’s considerably cheap for this sort of thing – the box sets you back £9.95, and postage is free.

 

If you’re interested, head to Mud & Bloom’s website to order yours now – or if you’re on-the-fence, head back a little later in the month to read our review of the box.


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Patrick Bate

Patrick is a filmmaker with so much Bristol in his blood the white blood cells are graffiti'd. Educated at the Northern Film School in Leeds, he’s returned home to be a Videographer and Reviewer for 365Bristol and BARBI. When he’s not messing about with cameras, he enjoys playing guitar, spending far too much time on tabletop RPGs, and being an awful snob about cider. Have a look at his work here, or get in touch at patrickb@365bristol.com.