A panel of horticultural experts answer gardening questions from a live audience. Recorded in a different location each week
- Programmes:
- on BBC iPlayer (132)
- coming up (2)
- Previous programmes:
- by year (279)
00:30 - 00:48
A portrait of the author Angela Carter via a series of postcards she sent to a friend.

A panel of horticultural experts answer gardening questions from a live audience. Recorded in a different location each week
Listen now (43 minutes)
Available since Sunday.
Eric Robson chairs a programme from the Royal College of Physicians beside Regent's Park.
Listen now (43 minutes)
Available since last Friday.
Peter Gibbs chairs a postbag programme from the GQT potting shed in Sparsholt College.
Listen now (43 minutes)
Available since Fri, 27 Jan 2012.
Eric Robson chairs a gardening advice show with Springfields Horticultural Society.
Available since Fri, 20 Jan 2012.
Anne Swithinbank, Bob Flowerdew and Matthew Wilson join gardeners in Birmingham.
Listen now (45 minutes)
Available since Thu, 12 Jan 2012.
Eric Robson chairs a gardening Q&A from North Somerset.
See all 132 programmes available now.
Seasoned experts Anne Swithinbank, Bob Flowerdew, Bunny Guinness, Chris Beardshaw, Matthew Biggs, Pippa Greenwood, Matthew Wilson and Christine Walkden answer your questions with Eric Robson or Peter Gibbs in the chair.
GQT visits all sorts of groups. We have recorded programmes in a prison, on a London Underground Station, in zoos, schools and even at a naturist club. Not all gardeners belong to a gardening club and we'll go wherever there are keen gardeners.
A new series in which we visit people all across the UK, learn what jobs need to be done when and help them develop their future design ideas.
As part of A History of the World the Gardeners' Question Time panel nominate the objects they consider to have shaped the history of gardening.
Follow Bob Flowerdew's weekly blog on the BBC Gardening website.
See all 2 programmes coming up.
Links are found automatically and then selected for relevancy. Find out more or report a problem.
© 2012
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read more.
This page is best viewed in an up-to-date web browser with style sheets (CSS) enabled. While you will be able to view the content of this page in your current browser, you will not be able to get the full visual experience. Please consider upgrading your browser software or enabling style sheets (CSS) if you are able to do so.