In This Issue
Wyevale 'set to buy big name garden centre business in north'
Will Scotland get its own National Garden?
Waitrose customers are into grow-your-own...
Want to sell your garden centre? Then call us, say Wyevale Garden Centres
£3.4m support for Gardman brands delivers 20pc sales boost
Will you be one of The Greatest Catering Teams announced on June 9th?
Highfield Garden World to expand...again
First National Children's Gardening Week proves a success
HTA Futures is the venue for The Greatest Garden Centre Team Awards 2015
Gardman tool brands on course for £5m first-year turnover
Homebase Garden Academy student makes RHS show debut
Rush to buy bench featured in gold medal Chelsea garden
Perfect plant retailing rewarded at The National Plant Show
Turn the Summer Bank Holiday into a business trip to Germany
Garden Shop Manager - Surrey
Sales Exec - Wiltshire
Horticulture Manager - Surrey
Grower Supervisor - Lincolnshire
Bumper May Beckons
Get the Briers 'Golfies' charity golf glove
Plant food, lights, baskets and slug products selling well
Ferndale Garden Centre flash-mobbed by musical theatre group
It's been a great year for outdoor living sales, but which garden centre teams are The Greatest?
Beans are running away with it
Town & Country’s see-through macs a runaway success at Chelsea
BBC Gardeners’ World Live - Show update
Tylers garden machinery distributor joins Godfreys
GrootGroen organisers promise 'inspiring' show
Scotts of Thrapston are guests at Haddonstone's open gardens day
Jekka joins forces with Johnson for new herb range
Bestsellers Top 50 charts every week
Buy your subscription to GTN Bestsellers
All the latest news from the world of garden centre catering
Nominate your Catering Teams by 10:00am on Monday for entry into The Greatest Catering Awards 2015
The Apple Tree Restaurant at Brinsmore scoops catering award
Hot topics on the agenda at the HTA Catering Conference
Gluten-free market will continue to grow
Situations Vacant
Garden Shop Manager - Surrey
£22k -£24k per annum
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Sales Exec - Wiltshire
£25k -£30k per annum
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Horticulture Manager - Surrey
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Grower Supervisor - Lincolnshire
£18k to £25k per annum
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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

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Will Scotland get its own National Garden?



HTA President Stan Green has called for a National Garden for Scotland to be created to show off an 'amazing horticultural heritage' north of the Border. His comments follow an HTA parliamentary reception at Holyrood to celebrate Scottish horticulture.

"We have a national football stadium, a national rugby stadium, we have the Nation art gallery and the National museum... isn’t it a tragedy that a National garden is missing from the set," he said.

An 195 strong audience at the HTA parliamentary reception was made up of MSPs and representatives of gardening charities, community gardening groups as well as garden retail and nursery businesses from across the horticultural sector in Scotland.

The event, sponsored by keen gardener Christine Grahame MSP, took place in the Garden Lobby at Holyrood. Keynote speaker, Dr Aileen McLeod MSP, Minister for Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform spoke about the huge benefits brought by horticulture in Scotland which often go unnoticed. She spoke about the vital role that the horticultural sector plays and how continuing collaboration is critical in getting issues such as plant health more widely communicated. She publicly thanked HTA member and her own constituent Noel Allan from Galloway Heathers who provided MSPs with handmade heather buttonholes for the event, allowing them to demonstrate their support for Scottish horticulture.

Dr Richard Simpson MSP, who is a Patron of the therapeutic gardening charity, Trellis, spoke about the important role that horticulture plays in helping patients recover from mental illness and how a greater connection with plants will benefit us all. In particular, he noted the work done with dementia patients, which has shown how gardening can help to reconnect memories.

Stan Green concluded, “Scotland has an amazing horticultural heritage – from internationally renowned parks, public and private gardens with many societies and community groups to boot. What better place to collectively celebrate the importance of plants in Scotland – than the Scottish Parliament. Horticulture plays such a pivotal role in society but do people, politicians and government take it seriously? More can be done.”

He added: "There continues to be moves afoot to provide a National garden in Scotland that can act as a focus for all that gardens and plants do for us. Indeed everything the evening is about. The garden would work with the national institutions to provide an accessible focus for any and all that are touched by plants. Which is all of us.

"The Calyx, as it would be known, would also act as a gateway and a centre of excellence that will exploit our heritage but offer a new environment of learning and cooperation for the future. What a chance to make a statement of intent, in Scotland we care about people and we care about our environment."

Children from Abbeyhill Primary School and Linwood High School also attended the reception. The Abbeyhill ‘eco group’ spoke about the importance of trees. “If we don’t plant more trees we will not have enough oxygen and more plants will keep the planet cooler and we will all be healthier”, said 6 year old Martin.

Attendees were able to visit the parliamentary garden for the first time at a parliamentary evening reception, and were invited to put forward their ideas for how the garden might better reflect Scotland’s relationship and history with horticulture.

By way of thanks HTA President Stan Green and HTA CEO Carol Paris presented Christine Grahame with a rose specially cultivated for the occasion, which had been named after her.

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