Plant Your Pants!

Registration now closed for 2025
Over 26,765 children and 3,283 adults registered to take part in Plant Your Pants 2025!
The Country Trust thanks every parent, teacher, youth worker, farmer, and community leader who signed up and joined the movement. By helping children get their hands in the soil, they’ve sown the seeds of a lifelong connection to nature.
Missed out this year? Don’t worry, Plant Your Pants will reopen on 20th March 2026.
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More about Plant Your Pants
The Country Trust’s delightfully down-to-earth Plant Your Pants campaign has once again captured imaginations across the UK, encouraging children and communities to get outside, get messy, and discover the magic of soil.
Built around one simple idea, bury a pair of 100% cotton pants in the ground, wait eight weeks, and see what’s left, this playful yet powerful campaign helps children connect with the natural world in the most hands-on way.
This year’s campaign saw schools, families, and community groups across the country rally together, inspired by the chance to plant pants and see for themselves how alive and important healthy soil really is.
Recent findings from a Childwise survey commissioned by The Country Trust reveal that around a third of UK children have no opportunity to engage with soil, whether through gardening, digging, or outdoor play, either at home or in school. This growing disconnect from the environment raises concerns about the long-term impacts on children’s development and wellbeing.
“Getting hands in the soil isn’t just a fun activity—it’s a vital part of a child’s physical, mental, and emotional development,” said Jill Attenborough, CEO of The Country Trust. “We believe every child deserves the opportunity to feel the earth between their fingers, and our work in food, farming and nature education strives to make these moments of connection fun, engaging, and accessible to all. Plant Your Pants is a brilliant way for children to begin building a fundamental relationship with soil—one pair of pants at a time.”
While it may seem like a small act, participants are helping to address a deeper issue. Through burying their cotton pants, children are not only learning about the life beneath their feet but also breaking the cycle of disconnect, gaining first-hand experience of nature’s role in our everyday lives.
Because when children get their hands in the soil, they grow in every way that matters.