In This Issue
€12m turnover for new garden centre with no outside planteria
Ex-Waitrose executive in charge of the UK's biggest gardening club
Work starts on £2 million garden centre
New products are a hit as sales double
Provado Lawn Grub Killer may be withdrawn following EU ruling
Blueberry plants are this week's bestselling GYO product
New Close-Focus Wildlife Camera enhances Bushnell’s Largest Line-Up for the British Outdoors in 2013
Tee off for the GIMA Golf Day and raise money for charity
Growing media sales...Up 142% on 2012! Down 42% on 2011!
A very busy April for WoodBlocX
Giving people a reason to visit is key
Making up for lost time
Petunia named Plant of the Month for May
Forum on developing business strategies
Great news for Squire's employees
GCA Trust helps horticultural students to continue studying
Cookshop now open at Poundbury Gardens
School competition gets a head start thanks to Durstons
GTN Bestsellers - garden centre sales data every week
Bestsellers Top 50 charts every week
 

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Petunia named Plant of the Month for May


With the emergence of a late spring, the colourful petunia has been named as HTA’s Plant of the Month for May.

Petunias are ideal as basket and container plants and will provide bright, vibrant flowers all summer long.
 
As part of the “Spring into Summer in the Garden” campaign, the HTA is promoting petunias, which come in a variety of blooms including single and double, ruffled or smooth petals.

They can be striped, veined or solid in colour, with mounding or cascading habits. Most Petunia flowers have a wonderful delicate perfume. Petunias flower for months through summer especially in warm, dry weather.
 
Spreading type petunias which include the ‘Surfinia’ series are some of the most popular petunias because they do not need dead heading and they can be used as bedding plants, groundcovers or trailing in containers and hanging baskets. The two oldest types of petunias are grandifloras and multifloras.

Both types are mounding in their habit of growth, grandiflora has larger flowers whilst the multifloras perform better in wet conditions. 

Calibrachoa or ‘Million Bells’ look like tiny petunias but are in fact an entirely different species.
 
Petunias come in all shapes and sizes from bushy small flowering types to large flowering trailing types so can be used in most situations. 

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 about Plant of the Month, visit www.the-hta.org.uk/plantofthemonth2013
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