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Is your garden a gold mine?

Before you chuck out your old gardening tools or that urn you inherited from your grandmother, check out their value because Jonty Hearnden, presenter of the BBC1 show Cash In The Attic, says you could be sitting on a goldmine.

Jonty Hearnden
Jonty Hearnden

He reckons you may be able to sell anything from old paving slabs to large concrete urns, ancient tools, aged weathervanes and benches for hundreds - or even thousands - of pounds.

People who’ve inherited property or are clearing houses for relatives are the most likely candidates to find an Aladdin’s cave of treasure in the garden.

“The most common items that may be lying around are garden urns or statuary of the 20th century, the moulded urns and the moulded figurines and birdbaths which you think are just old and don’t have any value,” he says.

“Actually, there’s a very good second hand value for those items because dealers and interior designers like urns which look really weathered. They might only be 20 to 40-years-old, but there’s a definite market for antique-looking reproduction garden urns and other items.”

Such items may be made of concrete, otherwise known as reconstituted stone, and the ones fetching the most money have an 18th or 19th century feel to them, he says.

“I went into a shop the other day where there were four identical urns that were 2ft tall by 1ft wide with box bushes in them. They looked a million dollars and they were probably around £400 each.”

A pair of rare Austin and Seeley composition stone Warwick urns from 19th century. Summers Place Auctions, Billingshurst
A pair of rare Austin and Seeley composition stone Warwick urns from 19th century. Summers Place Auctions, Billingshurst

Birdbaths, weathervanes and other ephemera all have a value, he says.

“You could easily get £100 for a birdbath in an auction sale. It has to be weathered so that it doesn’t look new, which can take a few years.”

Coalbrookdale garden benches, which are made of highly ornate and Victorian-looking cast iron, are extremely sought-after items which can fetch between £3,000 to £6,000, he observes. The 19th century benches are often stamped Coalbrookdale or C-B Dale Co, and the seat is probably made of timber slats.

“People may be sitting on a fortune because they just don’t realise how expensive these benches are,” he says.

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