In This Issue
Talking plants? Enough said!
Scotts UK's new boss embarks on road tour of garden centres
Klondyke is not for sale, says chief executive Bob Hewitt
Colin Wetherley-Mein to be next GIMA President
Actors Jim Carter and Imelda Staunton host Greenfingers fundraising dinner
GTN Bestsellers Charts shows encouraging signs for garden centre trade
Retailers urged to sign up for Love the Plot You’ve Got campaign
Town & Country raises over £7,000 for Greenfingers
Nominate your Rising Stars for 2015
Garden centre produces display tables made from recycled plant pots and trays
Bonnington Plastics expands Kingfisher Buying Team
Webbs to run bee-keeping taster courses
Greenfingers and Homebase announce new collaboration
Sales Merchandiser, Gardman
Centre Manager - Redfields Garden Centre, Fleet
Plant Area Manager - Angus
General Manager - Hertfordshire
Key Accounts Manager - Thetford, Norfolk
Centre Manager - Jersey
Warehouse Manager - Herts
Assistant Manager - Angus
HTA Garden Futures Conference takes place in Oxfordshire this September
Darlac launches new Tri-Blade Garden Shear to UK market
Sales boost provided by plant feeding products
Changing of the guard at Erin Horticulture
Onion sets bring joy not tears...
Andy Burns appointed managing director of Stewart
Industry to take on Garden Re-Leaf Day Thames Path walk
Multipurpose sales drive growing activity up 35%
HIPPO’s allotment challenge to visitors at The Edible Garden Show 2015
Bird food flies off the shelves during January
Pansy is the plant of the month for March
Bosmere launch unique reversible covers
Rising demand for conservatories and glazed extensions in the UK
Provender Nurseries recognising potential
Writtle College postgraduate’s evocative image of an ancient tree wins photography competition
Gordon Castle Walled Garden confirms appointment of new Head Gardener
Bestsellers Top 50 charts every week
Buy your subscription to GTN Bestsellers
Situations Vacant
Sales Merchandiser, Gardman
Salary range £18k-25k subject to experience
Read more»
Centre Manager - Redfields Garden Centre, Fleet
Salary dependent upon experience
Read more»
Plant Area Manager - Angus
£20,000 to £24,000 pa
Read more»
General Manager - Hertfordshire
£40,000 to £45,000 pa
Read more»
Key Accounts Manager - Thetford, Norfolk
Read more»
Centre Manager - Jersey
Up to £50,000 plus benefits
Read more»
Warehouse Manager - Herts
Salary dependent on experience
Read more»
Assistant Manager - Angus
£26,000 to £28,000 pa
Read more»
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Contact us with your news.  Email neil.pope@tgcmc.co.uk, or trevor.pfeiffer@tgcmc.co.uk or call the GTN News team on 01733 775700

 


Pansy is the plant of the month for March



Little works of art will soon start to bloom ready for early spring in the garden. With abstract splashes of colour, these plants are none other than the popular pansy and viola, and the Horticultural Trades Association’s (HTA) Plant of the Month for March 2015.

These hardy, reliable plants have one of the widest colour ranges and can brighten up any garden space by being planted in beds, borders, containers and hanging baskets. In fact they are a great plant to back the Love the Plot you’ve Got campaign from the Garden Industry Marketing Board.

Recommended varieties include:Viola 'Aspasia', Viola cucullata, Viola 'Jackanapes' and Viola 'Moonlight'.

The common words ‘pansy’ and ‘violet’ are often used interchangeably. Plants considered to be pansies have four petals pointing upwards, and only one pointing down, while violets have three petals pointing up and two pointing down. Both can tolerate sun and cooler temperatures, and benefit from the removal of faded or dead flowers to prolong blooming and to encourage more flowers to grow. 

When planting pansies and violas in the garden it’s worthwhile considering some contrasting companion plants like shrubs which can complement their mix of colour and lower height. Daphne bholua ‘Jacqueline Postil’, also known as Nepalese paper plant, is an evergreen medium-sized shrub with highly fragrant deep pink and white flowers that are followed by black berries. While, Euphorbia amygdaloides var. robbiae, also known as Mrs Robb's bonnet, is a spreading evergreen perennial with dark green leaves from which arise large rounded sprays of yellow-green flowers.

Broadcaster and gardener, Esther Rantzen CBE, the celebrity champion for the month has a great love for pansies and violas. She says, “I love pansies for their soft colours, all the shades of blues, purples and golds, and for their faces, turned down, as if in contemplation. As Ophelia said, ‘There’s pansies, that’s for thoughts’ – and indeed the name comes from the French, pensees. They look fragile, but in fact they are tough, they can survive anything except the burning summer heat, and they seed themselves and return, year after year. And outside the garden wall their little wild cousins, the violets, send out their fragrance to reassure us that spring is on its way”.

Nominated and agreed upon by British growers and retailers, the HTA’s Plant of the Month campaign highlights the plants that are widely available and looking especially good each month.

For more details, please visit www.the-hta.org.uk/plantofthemonth

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