In This Issue
Manufacturers unite to champion the future of professional growing media in the UK
Christmas hope for Dobbies staff in “to be closed” centres
Choice Marketing’s 22nd Conference and Trade Show breaks records
Christmas Greatness – the 2024 search begins
Putting the heart into The Big Cheese
Staverton Nursery opens new restaurant and food hall
WHM Pet Group - Marriages - hosts spectacular 200 year heritage celebration
Fordingbridge delivers stunning new entrance for Groves Nurseries
Two weeks until the 2024 GIMA Awards – event sold out!
New Plant Barn opens at Northants shopping village
Old Railway Line Garden Centre unveils heart-warming Christmas Charity Book
Catering and non-garden sales help garden centres hold steady in wet September
UK companies look forward to IPM in Essen
Westland, RocketGro, LeisureGrow, Corby + Fellas, Woodmansterne and Allensmore are winners at Choice Marketing Conference 2024
Bradford garden centre group reaches final in three categories of regional business award
New Sanctuary Garden at Thrive London for people living with Dementia
Inaugural winners of RHS Britain in Bloom crowned overall champions 60 years later
Spring Fair invites you to share your stories
Bring home the magic of Christmas with British Garden Centres’ festive themes
Get your copy of GTN Xtra
New Sinclair appointments strengthen sales team
Riva Home brings heritage style to gardens with Morris & Co
HTA welcomes new Plant Health Information Service
British Air-Pot containers chosen by US Clean Plant Center Northwest
GCA hosts free retail security webinar for members
RSPCA seeks nature nurturers to become Wildlife Friends volunteers
HTA and FPC issue joint asks for urgent government action on the border
The best of last week's
Martin Breddy set to retire from Squire's Garden Centres
Rare opportunity to buy successful plant nursery with guide price of £1.375m
Applications open for BBC Gardeners’ World Beautiful Borders 2025
New community garden supported by the Mayor of London opens in North Kensington
Charnley’s Home and Garden implements WinRetail system
No more wasps with the amazing Waspinator
Glee: 50 years of influence, read GTN's Glee Review Issue on-line here
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New Sanctuary Garden at Thrive London for people living with Dementia

 

A new restful ‘sanctuary’ for vulnerable older Londoners is underway at Thrive London. The Sanctuary Garden will provide a peaceful, safe and accessible space for older and disabled people especially those living with dementia and their carers.

 

The garden, located in Thrive London’s Main Garden in Battersea Park, London, is designed to be a secure environment suitable for people with a range of sensory and mobility needs. Fragrant and vibrantly coloured plants and shrubs will provide excellent stimulation alongside sheltered seating to offer a place for conversation, quiet reflection and enjoyment of the changing seasons.

 

As well as making the benefits of nature and gardening publicly available to the older generation, the new garden will importantly support Thrive London’s Garden Thyme programme. Here, trained practitioners help people living with dementia or memory loss to engage in gentle gardening activities and nature-based crafts to enhance their wellbeing and quality of life. Each session is designed to stimulate the senses, evoke memories and maintain or improve physical abilities, and provides an opportunity to interact with others and connect with nature and plants.

 

 

The garden will also be used as a resource within Thrive’s Social and Therapeutic Horticulture (STH) courses to help develop more professionally trained STH practitioners.

 

“We’re so excited to start the build of the Sanctuary Garden and look forward to welcoming people to this reassuring safe space where older visitors and people on our programmes and their carers can benefit from time in nature, therapeutic gardening and feeling part of a community,” says Thrive STH Practitioner Alex McDonald.

 

“We hope that health and social care providers will welcome the garden and the support that it will bring to the local community. STH is invaluable for people with early onset dementia and can have a positive impact on their quality of life. Whilst people with dementia may not be able to remember their tasks, the feelings last longer than the memories,” adds Alex.

 

Engagement with nature and gardening drives behaviours that reduce the risks of dementia, delaying the onset, slowing the decline and reducing social isolation. Gardening activity in older age has also been associated with cognitive benefits over the course of life, with those who spend time gardening shown to have better cognitive function in later life than those who do not.

 

The creation of the Sanctuary Garden was generously funded by grants from the Wolfson Foundation and The National Garden Scheme, with funding for the Garden Thyme programme provided by the Julia Rausing Trust, helping Thrive to deliver its incredible services to even more people. The works started mid-October with a view to open in Spring 2025.

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