In This Issue
Westland call for reality to be brought to the peat debate
One year on and sales keep growing with plants reaching a March week record high
Garden Re-Leaf Day 2021 FUNdraising goes past £35k and is still growing...
It was a Mother’s Day bonanza, says GTN Bestsellers
Why choose Hamac Trading?
The BBQ game changer!
Eddie Topping retires
Plant sales double up for Mother’s Day
Dobbies Swansea among Welsh centres to reopen
Garden centres facing cap on business rates relief
Jeyes Fluid paves way for next generation recycled bottle
Perrywood Garden Centre reduces CO² emissions
GCA teams up with Planet Mark to enhance environmental section of inspection process
Cherry Lane Garden Centres group going green
Dobbies launches virtual events to get UK gardens blooming this Spring
Award-winning manufacturer produces garden boot range
Azpects sdds Robert Dyas to retail roll
Squire’s employee awarded for going the extra mile!
Innovative plant pots show the grass really can be greener
Inside Outside... A New Beginning for the garden market - Read GTN's March Issue on-line now
Get your own copy of GTN Xtra
RHS to be peat-free by 2025
Got enough stock to keep up with demand?
Turbo charged Veg-2-Gro
Growing media sales up 37% year to date
‘Making the unimaginable happen’ — organisers demonstrate resilience at the AIPH Virtual Expo Conference
The best of last week's
British Garden Centres announce 58th centre, in Harrogate, will open in April
Pershore School Horticultural Unit, Pershore High School, Worcestershire has unwanted visitors.
Shed prices set to soar
Appetite for gardens and gardening remains strong despite a cold February according to March HTA Market Update
Keukenhof not permitted to open on 20 March
Barton Grange Christmas 2020 - Exclusive GTN Xtra Photo Tour
Squires Badshot Lea - Christmas 2020
Perrywood at Christmas 2020 - with correct photo gallery now...
Bestsellers Top 50 charts every week
Buy your subscription to the GTN Bestsellers printed weekly newsletter
All the latest news from the world of pet products
Plan to tackle worsening dog theft problem
Hill’s launches solution to sensitivities in dogs
Supreme is kind to the Earth with new bathing sand
Send us your news and great ideas

Contact us with your news.

Email trevor@pottingshedpress.co.uk or call the GTN News team on 07973 504214

 

Sponsored by:


Pershore School Horticultural Unit, Pershore High School, Worcestershire has unwanted visitors.

As pupils returned to school this week under the governments ‘Roadmap’, Pershore High School in Worcestershire has also seen some unwanted visitors arrive.

 

The Pershore School horticultural unit, gives school students the opportunity to learn some of the skills of horticulture and gardening techniques, was broken into overnight. They could now do with your help to help replace items of equipment stolen.

 

Anne Watson, the teacher running the unit said: “It is heartbreaking for us all especially the students – they are having a tough enough time at the moment as it is, without this sort of thing happening."

 

Items stolen include:

  • 5 pairs of Kent and Stowe secateurs
  • 1 pair Kent and Stowe left handed secateurs
  • 5 Spear and Jackson hand forks
  • 5 Darlac hand trowels
  • 1 Wilkinson Sword folding pruning saw
  • 4 pairs of Town & Country gardening gloves
  • I Kent and Stowe digging spade
  • Our Stanley tool box which had all sorts of bits in there, screwdrivers, pliers, hammer, spanner set, wire cutters and that sort of thing.

"The value of things taken, probably barely comes to £200, but to us as a unit, which has to be entirely self funding, it is a big blow. We are hoping that some suppliers of gardening equipment can help us out with replacing the stolen tools.  

This year especially, we have lost so much opportunity for the students to raise money by producing plants and cut flowers for sale to staff and parents as well as growing produce for the school kitchens because of the lockdowns. We are just fortunate  the one shed, which has all our Wolf Multi-change tools, donated to us by E.P. Barrus last year and used by our wheelchair bound students,  was left untouched.”

 

Anne continued: “It is a setback for us, especially at this time of year when we are working hard to catch up with the students and Covid regulations mean we are trying to limit the number of students who use each tool to reduce the risk of infection. We have been very lucky in the past to have so much support from garden product manufacturers and local garden centres with even things like compost and packets of seeds, along with much of our equipment donated."

 

The school is one of only a few mainstream schools in the country to have its own dedicated horticultural unit where students can experience some of the skills of horticulture and gardening. Four years ago the school achieved the status of “Approved Centre for Royal Horticultural Society Qualifications”. This means that students can gain a recognised horticultural grade through the RHS assessment process which helps them into employment or further education.

 

Neil Gow, who many of us from the garden retail industry know, volunteers at the school as a horticultural trainer and assessor added: “Students who have gained some experience with us have gone on to further qualifications at specialist colleges and got work locally in garden centres and private or National Trust gardens. We have just heard this week that another of our students has gained a place at Pershore College of Horticulture to start his course this autumn.”

 

If you can help out with the supply of items, contact Neil Gow via ngow@pershore.worcs.sch.uk  or the school direct:

 

    The Horticultural Unit, Pershore High School, Station Road, Pershore, Worcestershire WR10 2BX

 

    T: 01386 552471 W: http://www.pershore.worcs.sch.uk/  E: office@pershore.worcs.sch.uk

Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Del.icio.us Digg | Comment (0)
Comment
Name:*

Email Address:*

Comment:*