Social media for gardeners

Between jobs, write one line about the garden you just tidied and Blast Everything posts it everywhere at once. The UK posting tool for gardeners who work a local round with no time to sit at a screen.

Download Blast Everything on the App Store

Why quiet gardeners lose local work

Gardening is won on your doorstep. Most of the work is regular maintenance and a recurring round, and most of your next customers are the neighbours who see you cutting a hedge two doors down. When someone wants their garden sorted, they look for a gardener who is clearly active nearby and clearly reliable. The one showing recent work in their area gets the call.

If your last post was a year ago, you are not in that decision. The steady drip of visible local work is what fills the gaps in your round and turns a whole street into customers rather than just the one house you started with.

The problem is not you, it is the time

You are edging a lawn at eight, clearing a border at eleven, hauling clippings to the tip at four. Nobody sensible expects you to sit down and write captions for five apps. Marketing loses to the next garden, and it should.

Blast Everything is built for that reality. One line, done from the van, then back on the tools.

One job update, every channel

Finish a garden, type one line about it, add a photo if you have one. Blast Everything turns that into a proper post for all 11 of your channels and schedules them so your presence stays steady through the seasons, busy summers and quiet winters alike.

FacebookInstagramLinkedInXTikTokYouTubePinterestGoogle Business ProfileRedditWhatsAppEmail

Works on iOS and on the web.

What to post when you have no idea what to post

Forget clever. A plain, local job update is what wins work, and a before-and-after photo does the selling for you. Here is what one typed line looks like once it has become a post:

Overgrown back garden tidied up in Thatcham today. Brambles cleared, borders dug over, lawn cut back to something usable. Big difference in an afternoon, before and after below.
Hedges cut and shaped in Newbury this morning. Grown out over the summer, now neat and square with all the trimmings cleared away. Ready for the autumn.
Lawn treatment and fresh edging in Hungerford. Fed, aerated and the edges cut back sharp. Tidy stripes and clean lines, and a garden that looks looked after.

Post one of these after a job and within a few weeks you look busy, trusted and worth calling first in your area.

How often should a gardener actually post?

Two or three times a week is enough. Your work runs on a maintenance round and shifts with the seasons, so you cannot plan a fussy content calendar around it, and you should not try. Instead, treat each finished garden as a natural moment to post. An overgrown plot tidied, a hedge shaped, a lawn treated. That is more than enough material to look busy and reliable without ever sitting down to brainstorm captions.

Being seen working nearby is the whole game. A feed that quietly shows real gardens on real streets a couple of times a week tells the neighbours that you are established, local and available, and neighbours are your easiest new customers. A feed that has been silent since last year, then suddenly posts everything at once, tells them the opposite. Because Blast Everything schedules your posts out for you, even a flat-out week in high summer still produces a steady, professional presence rather than nothing then a flood.

Keep your camera handy on the job. A quick before-and-after of an overgrown garden brought back to order, or a photo of a freshly shaped hedge, will always beat a stock image. People call the gardener they can see doing careful, tidy work on their own doorstep, so let your finished gardens do the selling.

Simple pricing, cancel any time

Starter

GBP 9.99 / month

All 11 channels. Cancel any time.

Start blasting

Write one line about your next finished garden and let it post everywhere for you.

Start blasting
Download Blast Everything on the App Store

Gardener questions, answered

I am a solo gardener working a round all day. When would I even use this?

Between jobs. One line about the garden you just finished, a before-and-after photo if you took one, and it posts everywhere on a schedule. Under a minute in the van.

What should a gardener post?

A plain local job update. An overgrown garden tidied, a hedge shaped, a lawn treated. Local and honest beats clever, and the neighbours who see it become new customers.

Which platforms does it cover?

Eleven channels including Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, X, TikTok, YouTube, Pinterest, Google Business Profile, Reddit, WhatsApp and Email.

How much is it?

Plans start at GBP 9.99 per month and you can cancel any time.