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June Grow Guide: From greenhouse to garden

10 June 2026 | Ella Sanderson

June Grow Guide: From greenhouse to garden

June

Written by Nelly Hall

Welcome to the June instalment of our 2026 Alitex Grow Guides. This month’s guide is written by Nelly Hall, Creative Director and co-owner of Alitex, whose passion for gardening and hands-on experience growing both at home and on our RHS Chelsea Flower Show stand bring a practical and creative perspective to the season.

As gardens and greenhouses move into full summer growth, Nelly shares advice on planting out annuals, supporting dahlias and helping tomatoes and chillies thrive in their final growing positions.

Drawing on recent experience preparing for Chelsea and restoring her own greenhouse afterwards, she offers practical guidance on greenhouse management, feeding, harvesting and watering wisely, helping gardeners make the most of this productive and rewarding stage of the growing season.

The video below features Nelly Hall planting up the dahlia beds alongside Eddie, one of our Alitex gardeners, as they tackle some of the key jobs featured in this month’s Grow Guide. Stay tuned to the Alitex Instagram for more videos from Nelly’s June Grow Guide, where she’ll be sharing seasonal tips and practical advice for making the most of your garden and greenhouse this summer.

Where to find out more

Instagram: @nellyatalitex


As June progresses, gardens and greenhouses enter a productive phase, with young plants settling in and summer crops developing well. Nelly Hall shares practical tips on planting annuals, supporting dahlias, and caring for tomatoes and chillies. She also covers greenhouse ventilation, feeding, watering and harvesting, highlighting the key tasks that help plants thrive through the warmer months while making the most of space, weather conditions and the rewards of earlier efforts.

FAQs: June Growing

Moving plants out of the greenhouse isn’t about picking a date, it’s about recognising when the plant has outgrown protection.

By June, most plants are no longer benefiting from being under glass. In fact, they often start to suffer. Roots fill pots quickly, temperatures fluctuate more in a confined space, and airflow becomes limited. All of that leads to slower growth and weaker plants.

A plant is ready to move when it’s actively growing, well-rooted, and no longer fragile. If you hesitate at this stage, you don’t “protect” the plant, you restrict it. The result is often delayed growth and reduced performance through the rest of the season.

A well-timed move into open ground allows the plant to establish quickly, build resilience, and make full use of natural conditions.

By June, tomatoes and chillies are transitioning from vegetative growth into fruiting, and that shift changes everything about how they should be managed.

Keeping them in intermediate pots or trays at this stage limits what they can produce. Roots need consistent access to moisture and nutrients, and that only happens when they’re given enough space.

Placing them into their final position, stabilises their environment. Watering becomes more consistent, nutrient uptake improves, and the plant can focus on setting and developing fruit.

Delay this step and you often end up with tall, leafy plants that look healthy but fail to deliver a strong crop. The structure might be there, but the output isn’t.

Treating all tomatoes the same is one of the quickest ways to reduce your yield.

Cordon varieties are vigorous, vertical growers. Left unmanaged, they produce excessive foliage, restrict airflow, and create the perfect conditions for disease. Removing side shoots and training them onto supports isn’t optional, it’s what allows the plant to produce quality fruit.

Bush varieties behave differently. They are genetically programmed to stop growing at a certain point and produce a set crop. Interfering too much, especially by removing growth, can actually reduce the number of fruiting points.

The key is understanding the plant’s growth habit before you start pruning. Good management improves airflow, light penetration, and fruit quality. Poor management just creates more problems to fix later.

Dahlias don’t fail slowly, they collapse quickly. By the time stems start bending under their own weight, you’ve already lost structure.

Supporting them early is what makes the difference. Using a grid or mesh system across the bed allows the plant to grow through it naturally, rather than being forced into position later. This approach distributes weight evenly and prevents stems snapping under pressure from wind or rain.

Trying to stake individual stems after the plant has grown rarely works well. You end up reacting to problems instead of preventing them. A structured support system keeps plants upright, improves airflow, and results in better-quality blooms.

Heat isn’t just uncomfortable for plants, it actively limits their ability to grow and produce.

In June, the issue isn’t warmth, it’s excess. A greenhouse can spike far beyond optimal temperatures within hours, especially in direct sun. When that happens, plants shut down, pollination drops, and growth slows.

Managing temperature is about control, not reaction:

  • Ventilation should be consistent, not occasional
  • Shading reduces extreme peaks rather than chasing them afterwards
  • Dampening surfaces lowers ambient temperature and humidity balance

Without understanding how your greenhouse behaves throughout the day, you’re guessing. A max/min thermometer gives you that insight, allowing you to adjust conditions properly instead of reacting too late.

The biggest mistake in summer watering is doing it too often and too lightly.

Shallow watering creates shallow roots. That makes plants dependent on constant attention and far less resilient when conditions change. Deep watering encourages roots to grow downwards, where moisture is more stable and reliable.

This becomes critical in June. Plants with deeper root systems handle heat better, recover faster, and maintain more consistent growth.

It’s also important to think about where the water goes. Wet foliage, especially in a greenhouse, increases the risk of fungal issues. Directing water to the root zone keeps plants healthier and reduces avoidable problems.

Plants don’t produce indefinitely without a signal to keep going. Once fruit matures and stays on the plant, it tells the plant its job is done.

Regular harvesting interrupts that cycle. It encourages the plant to continue flowering and producing new fruit rather than slowing down.

With chillies, this is especially noticeable. A plant that’s picked consistently will keep producing over a much longer period, while one left untouched often peaks early and declines.

Understanding this changes how you approach harvesting. It’s not just collecting produce, it’s actively managing the plant’s productivity.

“Mary, if you’re going to buy a greenhouse it has to be an Alitex”

Alan Titchmarsh CBE, English gardener and broadcaster

Upcoming Events

Netherwood Estate Open Glasshouse Event

On Thursday 11th June you can explore an Alitex greenhouse up close with a tour of the beautiful Netherwood grounds, alongside “The Countryside Through Mid-Century Art,” curated by Richard Turkington of Fifties Art.

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