22/10/2014

Our Blog has now moved!

Our Blog is now incorporated on our website. Please follow to link for hints, tips and ideas from our plant buyer Emma and garden enthusiast Lin

http://www.golden-acres-nursery.co.uk/blog.html

09/09/2014



September is a hugely busy month in the buying department at Golden Acres, we’re busy prepping for next Spring and reviewing the past year as well as ensuring we have the best stock available for Autumn. Last week I went to a large plant show in Cheshire where I caught up with some of our current suppliers and found some exciting new suppliers and plants to stock next season. One of whom is just down the road from H/O at Lymington. I’m off to another show in the Midlands next week then to Italy the following week to look at larger specimens and olive trees. Phew!



Part of my role as a buyer is to look at consumer trends and one thing I have really noticed over the past fifteen years is that less people are buying shrubs and trees to plant in the Autumn time. This is sad to me as it is actually the best time of year to get hardy plants into the ground. The soil is still relatively warm so although the plants aren’t doing much above the ground they’re getting their roots established underground ready to take up all the water and nutrients they need to grow well once the weather starts to warm up in the Spring. So if you find your plants don’t really take off when you plant them in summer try some Autumn planting, you may be pleasantly surprised by the result!

Emma
   

03/09/2014


My garden has been a little haven for the last week whilst I was on holiday, it was wonderful to be able to sit back and watch the Red Arrows display en-route to the Bournemouth Airshow!! We had a day trip over to Guernsey and outside the restaurant there was an amazing display of grasses, all shapes and colours, and the movement when the breeze caught them was beautiful. I think this could be my next year’s project, and grasses are very hardy for our climate!

Emma’s away this week at a Plant Trade Show and soon she’s off to a nursery in Italy! This time of year is busy for our Buying Team, Carrie our Gift Buyer is taking her team off to the Speciality & Fine Food Fayre, hopefully bringing us back some yummy samples that will be stocked in some of the Garden Centres Food Areas. After that she’ll be off to The Autumn Gift Fair and both Carrie and Emma will be at Glee searching for new ideas for next years ranges, we’re all really looking forward to seeing what they come back with!!

Lin
Our keen amateur gardener!

27/08/2014



I’ve got this week off and it’s time to start clearing in the garden, my sweet peas have really started to look leggy and mildewy so they will be put onto the compost heap.  I’ll be keeping some off the seeds for next year’s crop.



 One of the cucumber plants that I planted from seed seems to be a rogue and we’ve called it ‘Audrey’ after the Little Shop of Horrors, She’s already grown 10ft and has produced one huge gourd! Can’t wait to see just how large she gets!!



I’m really pleased with an ‘orange’ bed I developed this year, it’s done really well throughout the summer with Day Lilies, Campanula & Dahlia’s and it just coming into it’s Autumn bloom now with Crocosmia, Osteospermum, Tagettes and a beautiful variegated orange Geranium. Now’s the time to keep dead-heading and hopefully get a new flush of flowers until the first frosts.



Lin
Our keen amateur gardener!

20/08/2014



Exciting news, I’ve just been asked by Radio Solent to take part in a feature about a brand new variety of Apple called Little Pax, that we will be stocking in all our Garden Centres this Autumn.

It’s a wonderful story about a rare original tree that was gifted to the Nuns at St Cecilia’s, a Benedictine Abbey in the Isle of Wight. It had grown and flourished for many years there and Frank Matthews, one of our favourite British Tree growers have now propagated enough to enable us to offer them for sale.

The Little Pax is a perfect late season delicious sweet dessert apple with hints of melon and champagne!! It produces an abundance of orchid – like pink and vivid white flowers in Spring, making it perfect for attracting bees and wildlife into your garden. During the Summer it develops rich reddish pink apples with rose red flecks and gradually turns in Autumn with shades of soft yellow. For every plant sold a charitable donation will be made to help with the upkeep of St Cecilia’s Abbey.

The feature will be going out on Sunday the 24th August in the morning, so have a listen!

Emma



13/08/2014



The last week we’ve noticed a nip in the air at night which is prompting thoughts of Autumn... The summer bedding has nearly sold out and we’re starting to see some of our favourite Autumn bedding plants become available. It does seem early but I have found if you get them planted by the end of September they have plenty of time to grow into stronger, larger plants whilst it’s still warm and as a result flower much better throughout the winter. I was really impressed (even if I do say so myself!) with our Belgian Chrysanthemums this year, they are really chunky plants and look almost like box topiary balls their habit is so neat.



We will also be taking delivery of the first spring flowering bulbs in the next few weeks. These packed bulbs are the most economical way of getting a beautiful display in the spring. I love planting them in Autumn, forgetting about them then enjoying the surprises as they flower from January through to May. My favourites are the miniature daffodils, my husband loves the dwarf irises.



Emma

06/08/2014

I’m loving reaping the rewards of my veggie patch at the moment, I’ve been busy collecting french and borlotti beans, beetroots, salad leaves, tomatoes and courgettes for the last few weeks now and scouring my cookbooks for different ideas!!

Over the last few months I’ve been hunting in the local charity shops and car-boot sales for colanders and have made them into my herb hanging baskets.


Looking through a gardening magazine it’s given me a wonderful idea of how to carry on the baskets through the winter by planting up with swiss & ruby chards, leeks,  Cavolo Nero spinach and beetroots for striking colour and still keeping me fed through the winter months by picking the baby leaves. I’ve already planted the seeds and will wait until September to plant them into the baskets when my summer herbs have died off.

Lin
Our keen amateur gardener!

30/07/2014





Last week our lovely Plant manager from Landford, Toni, & I went to see some bedding plant trials near Banbury. It was great to see the plants at full maturity & get a chance to vote on our favourite plants that had been bred this year!



As you can see by the photos it was a riot of colour & we were reminded how well some of our old favourites do. The humble marigold was looking the healthiest out of all the bedding plants. I forget what a good doer they are coping well with all the hot weather we’ve had this summer.



We loved the display gardens, they show so well what you can do with just bedding plants. Ideal if you have limited space or live in rented accommodation & don’t want to spend a fortune on plants but enjoy a pretty display.

Emma B



23/07/2014




Look at the visitor I had to my fishpond this week, what a beauty, it’s a Southern Hawker dragonfly, with it’s recognisable colourings and marks and one of the largest of the dragonfly family, they only live as adults for about two months so I’m very lucky to see it!



I’m thoroughly enjoying sitting back and watching all the pollinating insects buzzing around the garden and pleased to see the amount of bees busily coming and going. I’m popping into Cadnam Garden Centre on Saturday 2nd August as a local bee keeper is visiting with a contained bee hive and demonstating the working life of a bee and how honey is made, should be really interesting!!
Lin
our keen amateur gardener!

16/07/2014

After watching the highlights from the Hampton Court Flower Show last week I was given the idea to revamp an old sink I’ve had in the garden for years and have collected various stone, slate and flint and put them diagonally, bedded in sand. I’ve planted assorted coloured Sempervivums (Houseleeks) and some succulents and used some moss to cover the cracks! I’m really looking forward to seeing this develop and the plants creep over the stones, and the added bonus I will not need to water it regularly!! 
Lin
Our keen amateur gardener!

Coffee Shops

Coffee Shops
All 4 of our Garden Centres have a coffee shop with a wide variety of hot and cold beverages, cakes, pasteries and many more. Look out for our special offers.