In This Issue
'Wyevale close to Dobbies deal' say insiders
Garden centre owner threatened for ‘Tory tax’ blackboard
North Norfolk garden centre on sale for £675,000
New housing development on site of former award-winning garden centre
Champagne flows as Deco-Pak announces highest turnover to date
May Day! Solar lights and GYO are on fire
Wyevale Garden Centres become the first national retailer to stock Wool Compost
Johnsons Seeds brand has makeover for 2016
Town & Country to hand over £2,105 to Greenfingers at Chelsea
BBC reveal winning amateur who will build Chelsea garden
Put on a Chelsea Planteria Display...and win a bottle of champagne
New book retraces the history of award-winning Barton Grange
More retailers boost sales with Pimped-up Roundup displays
Make the food connection and boost sales
Plant Buyer - Romsey
Amenity Sales Person - Norfolk
Amenity Sales Executive - Leicestershire
Garden Retail Manager - East Midlands
HTA to hold Scottish Parliamentary Reception
New Head of Retail Brand Marketing appointed to Retail Division at i2i
11 new members join GIMA
GIMA Buying Group confirmed for members
Lighting product sales continue to power ahead
Runner Bean White Emergo is top of the crops
Veg planting drives sales of compost
Twitter Q&A with Charlie Dimmock
DCF launches new orchid collection to support student growers
Jessica Evans is Young Horticulturist of the Year 2015!
Host of new products in Mr Fothergill's 2016 retail offer
DIY chain sued over hot tub Legionnaires deaths
Bestsellers Top 50 charts every week
Buy your subscription to GTN Bestsellers
GTN Food Xtra...GTN Food Xtra...GTN Food Xtra...
Glee Food & Catering Zone sign up Catering Design Group
Catering tip of the week: Make your message personal
Garsons' butchers through to final of national BBQ competition
Writtle College to host Food and Farming Day for schoolchildren
Adande and Gamble Retail Solutions team up to deliver hot food 'profit' pods
Situations Vacant
Plant Buyer - Romsey
Salary commensurate with experience
 
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Amenity Sales Person - Norfolk
£25k per annum
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Amenity Sales Executive - Leicestershire
£20k to £30k per annum
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Garden Retail Manager - East Midlands
£28k -£32k 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

 


BBC reveal winning amateur who will build Chelsea garden

One of the more democratic features of the 2015 RHS Chelsea Flower Show (which opens to the press on Monday and RHS members on Tuesday) is the Main Avenue built by the winner of BBC2’s Great Chelsea Garden Challenge

The  winning amateur garden designer was revealed on screen last Thursday evening as Sean Murray, 51, an occupational therapist and nurse from Northumberland.

He was one of six would-be designers mentored by Joe Swift of BBC2's Gardeners' World for the series as they built show gardens in different styles over just four days. The series was recorded last September at gardens across including RHS Garden Harlow Carr, while the finale took place at RHS Garden Wisley.

The gardens - cottage gardens, formal gardens and conceptual gardens – were judged by  RHS judge James Alexander Sinclair and Gold medal-winning garden designer Ann-Marie Powell.

The prize was the opportunity to create a Show Feature at Chelsea inspired by the RHS Greening Grey Britain campaign. The designers were judged on how well they met the brief, their horticultural knowledge, design skill and their garden’s sense of theatre.

Wyevale Nurseries, appeared in the second programme (filmed at Sudeley Castle, Gloucestershire) for which they supplied the plants.

The RHS briefed Sean to design a front garden for the RHS Chelsea Flower Show, incorporating parking and plants as part of the charity’s new campaign to get Greening Grey Britain. As many of the UK’s front gardens are paved over for parking, the RHS wanted Sean to design a garden that would demonstrate how you can have space to park a car, but that it is also possible, and important, to incorporate plants within a front garden. 

Sean's design incorporates gravel with naturalised planting and he has kept hard surfacing to a minimum, due to its associated impact on local flooding and rising temperatures. The ebb and flow of a water-filled crevice divides the garden, symbolising the flooding and draining of the earth. Reclaimed materials have been included to complement the slate dry stone walling and paving.  Nooks and crannies are created to support nesting and overwintering habitats for wildlife. Secluded seating is situated beneath a tree canopy, while a tapestry of shrubs, perennials and scented climbers is interwoven with annuals and bulbs, providing year-round interest from leaf texture, form and changing colour.

Left: John Lawrence of Wyevale Nurseries, who supplied plants for the second programme.

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