56
WIN! OVER $1600 WORTH OF GIVEAWAYS THIS ISSUE 12 WAYS TO SAVE TIME IN THE GARDEN starting out GROWING NON-STOP SALADS practical advice dealing with slugs and snails masterclass shrubs and small trees for early spring colour THE MAGAZINE OF NURSERY & GARDEN INDUSTRY NEW ZEALAND ISSUE 03/2013 Get fresh! www.gogardening.co.nz $4.95 INC GST spring Ready, set, grow!

Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

An inspirational New Zealand Gardening Magazine brought to you by the Nursery and Garden Industry Association

Citation preview

Page 1: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

WIN! OVER $1600 WORTH OF GIVEAWAYS THIS ISSUE

12 WAYS TO SAVE TIME IN THE GARDEN

starting outGROWING

NON-STOP SALADS

practical advice

dealing with slugs and snailsmasterclass

shrubs and small trees for early spring colour

THE MAGAZINE OF NURSERY & GARDEN INDUSTRY NEW ZEALAND

ISSU

E 03

/201

3

Getfresh!

www.gogardening.co.nz

$4.95 INC GST

springReady, set, grow!

Page 2: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

It’s spring - the best excuse we’ve had all year to

indulge in all things gardening. Like no other season,

spring inspires the greenie within us and it’s a great

time to grow something new.

No matter how young or old, rich or poor, green or

black thumbed, we can all get the buzz that comes from

seeing our plants grow. Gardening projects don’t have to

be time consuming or expensive. One of life’s simplest

pleasures is to grow something from seed. Our Kids Go

Gardening project on page 34 is just one example of a mini gardening

activity that’s loads of fun.

For anyone wanting to start a small vege patch, now’s the time.

Nothing could be easier than salad greens, but maybe your new

challenge is to keep them coming all spring and summer long. Sarah

O’Neil offers advice on page 17. Even for experienced gardeners there

is always something new to learn.

Perhaps the best thing about gardening is that it gets us outdoors.

Engaging with nature and breathing fresh air is scientifically proven to

be good for our physical and mental health. Chemical reactions in our

bodies work most efficiently when we inhale air that has high levels of

oxygen. Breathing fresh air helps us think better and sleep better.

It promotes healthy lungs, healthy skin, and may even help with

weight loss.

Plants indoors and out are our best air fresheners, reducing

toxins and increasing healthy oxygen. There is also strong evidence

to support what we instinctively know - that sunlight increases the

happiness chemicals in our brain.

So, forget spring cleaning! Spring is no time for household chores.

As the days get longer and warmer, and the garden is bursting with

new life, it’s time to head outdoors!

Happy spring gardening,

Go Gardening is published by Nursery & Garden Industry New Zealand. Articles in Go Gardening are copyright and may not be reproduced in any form, in whole or part, without the written permission of the publisher. All rights reserved in material accepted for this publication, unless specified otherwise. The opinions expressed in Go Gardening are not necessarily those of, or endorsed by, the publisher.

Editor Sue Linn

Designer Lee Kretschmar

Subeditor Sarah Thornton

Advertising Debbie Pascoe, phone 09 236 3260

Printer Webstar

Publisher Nursery & Garden Industry New Zealand phone 04 918 3511 email [email protected]

contents

Fresh Start

3 Shop window What’s new in garden centres

11 Real gardeners A thriving community garden

15 Tui Schools Competition

17 Starting out Non-stop salads

21 Edibles The new Potato Tom

22 Pest watch Coping with slugs and snails

25 Real gardeners Downsizing in Nelson

30 Perennials Beautiful new nemesias

32 Practical advice 12 time savers for gardeners

34 Kids Go Gardening

36 Natives Colourful NZ flax

40 Masterclass Spring in bloom

47 Edibles Family friendly fruit trees

48 Roses The Flower Carpet story

50 Noticeboard Spring events

52 Be in to win Exciting products for your garden

ed

itoria

l

www.gogardening.co.nz

2 go gardening spring

Like us on Facebookwww.facebook.com/gogardeningnz

nginzThe

Association ofNursery & Garden Industry

New Zealand

CO

VE

R P

HO

TO

: GA

P P

HO

TO

S

Page 3: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

gogardening.co.nz 3

SHOP WINDOW

It’s time to celebrate a brand new season with exciting new things for the garden.

wh

at’

s n

ew

FROM WAIKATO TO THE WORLDBorn and bred in Te Awamutu, Cordyline ‘Salsa’ takes the stage this spring - throughout New Zealand and across Europe too. Colour is what sets new ‘Salsa’ apart. New leaves emerge bright pink with deep red stripes. Colours intensify with age resulting in a multi-coloured effect. A dense clump in the early years, ‘Salsa’ will eventually develop a classic cabbage tree trunk. Part of the ‘Dancing Cordyline’ collection. Find out more at www.kiwiflora.com.

Grows 1.5m tall, 3m at maturityTolerates light frost and dry soil once establishedLikes sun or part shade and well-drained soil

Cordyline ‘Salsa’

HEDGE IN A HURRYAn exciting new sport of English Box, Buxus ‘Supergreen’ is set to delight gardeners with its quick growth and rich year-round colour. With a more elongated leaf and twice the growth rate of ordinary Buxus, ‘Supergreen’ is ideal for topiary and formal hedges.

Ideal for trimming and shapingTolerates dry conditions once established Likes sun or shade

CUTE FRUITNectarine ‘Button Bright’ is a new member of the unique Flatto™ fruit range. This productive little tree bears loads of flat, yellow-fleshed fruit. Sweet and juicy, it’s just the right size for lunch boxes.

Grows 4m tall by 3m wideFlowers springHarvest summer

Buxus ‘Supergreen’

Buxus sempervirens

Nectarine ‘Button Bright’

Page 4: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

COLD HARDY RHUBARBWith cheerful red stems and a delicious flavour, new Rhubarb ‘Grans Favourite’ is an ideal choice for cold climate gardens. Turning dormant to survive a very cold winter, it will reappear with gusto in spring. Easy to grow in most NZ climates, ‘Grans Favourite’ loves moist rich soil.

Grows 50cm tall and wideTolerates cold winters Likes sun or part shade

SWEETLY SCENTEDNew Michelia ‘Inspiration’ is a compact form of much-loved Michelia yunnanensis with glossy leathery leaves spread with exquisitely scented, porcelain-like flowers. This bushy evergreen is quite frost tolerant once established, and responds well to pruning. It makes a superb hedge or standalone specimen tree. Plant it wherever you might plant a camellia.

Grows upright to 3m tallFlowers spring Likes sun or part shade

wh

at’s n

ew

REPEAT PERFORMERSBelarina® Primulas repeat their outstanding flowering performance year after year (unlike the familiar seedling primulas and polyanthus). Available for the first time in NZ, in five stunning colours, these spectacular perennial plants revive the double form of the English woodland primula, now rare in the wild. Find out more at www.livingfashion.co.nz

Grows 18cm tall x 30cm wideFlowers from early spring Likes part shade

Michelia ‘Inspiration’

4 go gardening spring

Primula ‘Buttercup’ Primula ‘Cream’ Primula ‘Cobalt Blue’

Rhubarb ‘Grans Favourite’

Dianthus ‘Waterloo Sunset’

Page 5: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

HANDY HELPERThe new Joseph Bentley Garden Trug, brought to you by Tui, is the perfect garden accessory for gathering your lovingly cultivated

spring harvest. Find out more at tuiproducts.co.nz and

go to page 52 to be in to win!

BREAKTHROUGH MICHELIAAt last the beauty of Michelia yunnanensis can be enjoyed as a groundcover, complete with the fragrant white flowers and glossy evergreen foliage. Michelia ‘Free Spirit’ is a superb prostrate form with spreading branches bearing masses of scented upward facing flowers.

Grows 50-60cm tall x 2m wide Flowers spring and summer Likes sun or part shade

gogardening.co.nz 5

FRAGRANCE FOR GARDEN AND VASEThe latest ‘Magnifi-Scent® Pinks’ have just arrived from England. These exceptionally long flowering perennial Dianthus cope brilliantly in tough conditions, remaining colourful, compact and easy-care throughout a long hot summer. The fragrant flowers have strong stems for picking. Dianthus ‘Rebekah’ and ‘Waterloo Sunset’ are this spring’s exciting additions to the range. Find out more at www.livingfashion.co.nz

Grows 30 to 40cm tall x 60cm wideFlowers spring through summer Likes full sun

gogardening.co.nz 5

THAT’S INCREDIBLE!Is it a tomato that thinks it’s a potato or a potato that thinks it’s a tomato? Either way you win because this amazing plant produces both - potatoes and tomatoes on the same plant. We’re not kidding! Turn to page 21 to find out more about new ‘Potato Tom’ by incredible edibles.

Grows 1-1.5m tall Harvest summer and autumnLikes sun

ELEGANT EDGERTo create perfect definition between garden and lawn, use the Joseph Bentley Garden Edger and enjoy the carefully finished solid oak wooden handle and stainless steel head. Find out more at tuiproducts.co.nz and go to page 52 to be in to win!

CHILD SIZEDThe new ‘Thumbelina’ apples, ‘Candy Crunch’, ‘Golden Crunch’ and ‘Ruby Crunch’ are perfectly sized for small hands. These brightly coloured mini fruits are a quarter of the size of regular apples, and they grow on mini trees. Read more on page 47. Find more fruit trees for home gardens at www.waimeanurseries.co.nz

Grows 3.5m tallFlowers spring Harvest late autumn

Apple ‘Thumbelina’

Michelia ‘Free Spirit’

Page 6: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

wh

at’s n

ew

6 go gardening spring

SHADES OF A SUMMER EVENING In deep purple black with bright gold and cream stars, distinctive tricolour Petunia ‘Twilight’ offers a stylish, sophisticated new look that’s perfect for summer pots. The upright, mounded plants are among the first petunias to commence flowering in spring, continuing their generous display throughout the season. Turn to page 52 to be in to win!

Grows 20-30cm tallFlowers spring and summerLikes sun or part shade

NATURAL IMMUNE BOOSTERDaltons Organic Bio-Fungicide is a groundbreaking development in the fight against plant diseases such as damping-off and root rot. The 100% organic, Bio-gro certified product range protects seeds and plants the natural way, by strengthening the plant’s immune system. It is non-toxic to humans, animals and wildlife. Find out more at www.daltons.co.nz. Turn to page 52 to be in to win!

READY MIXEDConsistently inconsistent, dramatic Petunia ‘Blue a Fuse’ blends beautiful shades of violet, yellow and white. No two flowers are identical on this fantastic new variety. The upright, mounded plants are ‘self-cleaning’, so there is no need for deadheading like most other petunias. This high impact petunia is especially effective in patio pots or hanging baskets. Turn to page 52 to be in to win!

Grows 20-30cm tallFlowers spring and summerLikes sun or part shade

Petunia ‘Blue a Fuse’

Petunia ‘Twilight’

Page 7: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

GE

RA

NIU

M R

ING

O

FLA

ME

_SY

CR

566

_07/

13A

D 1

3/62

0www.zealandia.co.nz

• Outstanding free flowering geranium available in many colours

• Thrives in warm sunny gardens or pots and very low maintenance

• Plant now for Spring, Summer & Autumn profusion of colour

Note: While Flame™ has taken great care in preparing this artwork responsibility for the printed artwork and copy accuracy lies with the client. The printer is responsible for checking artwork before plates are made, accuracy in measurements, plates tolerance requirements, registration and construction detailing. Any questions please contact flame before proceeding with the job. Copyright 2013 Flame.

Mina Giang (account service) | [email protected] | +61 2 9887 8500 | flame.com.au

Date: 24.07.13 | Round: FSize: 275mmH x 101.5Wmm

Name: FLAME_SYCR566_Go Gardening ZEALANDIA Geranium Ringo

AUSSIE ARRIVALThe Australian native wildflower, Hardenbergia violacea, usually occurs as a climbing plant, but not always. New Hardenbergia ‘Regent’ is not a climber, but a compact shrub form with leathery leaves and masses of purple pea flowers. This colourful shrub tolerates some frost. It looks great in a pot or as a hedge. A trim each year after flowering keeps it tidy and compact.

Grows 1 to 1.5m tallFlowers late winter and spring Likes sun and moist well-drained soil

ORCHID CARE MADE EASY New Baby Bio Orchid Food Drip Feeder is a super

easy way to keep orchids in peak condition, and flowering for longer. Especially formulated to match orchids’ nutritional needs

during their growing season, each feeder lasts for a month and there are four feeders per pack.

CoMPACT COMPOSTERTurn kitchen scraps and garden waste into beautiful rich compost to nourish your garden. The Tumbleweed 150L Compost bin is perfectly proportioned for small urban spaces. Find out more at tuiproducts.co.nz

Hardenbergia ‘Regent’

Page 8: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

8 go gardening spring

BERRY BERRY NICEAmong the earliest perennials to flower, nemesias quickly transform a barren post-winter garden with colour and fragrance. With bigger than ever blooms, new ‘Berry Delight’ Nemesias offer a tapestry of mauves, blues and pinks. The low mounding compact plants quickly cover a generous ground space and they’re a top contender for hanging baskets and pots. Find out more on page 30 or www.livingfashion.co.nz.

Grows 30cm tall x 60cm wideFlowers late winter and early spring Likes full sun and well-drained soil

BRIGHT SPARKSStriking new striped Cordyline ‘Electric Pink’

and Cordyline ‘Electric Star’ are perfect for creating permanent garden highlights, planted in groups

or as single accents. These easy care evergreens do not develop a trunk but expand slowly sideways to form a

dense clump. Both grow well in large pots.

Grows 1.2m tall x 1m wideTolerates dry conditions and frost

Likes sun or part shade, well drained soil

Nemesia ‘Raspberries and Cream’

Cordyline ‘Electric Pink’

Cordyline ‘Electric Star’

Flower Carpet ‘Pink Splash’

BRAND NEW FLOWER CARPET

Consistently among the most disease-resistant roses ever bred, Flower Carpet roses are long standing favourites. Naturally compact and easy to prune, they don’t require spraying to stay healthy. During their extremely long flowering season, they drop their petals cleanly so there’s no need for deadheading. Gorgeous new bi-colour Flower Carpet ‘Pink Splash’ is more compact than the original Flower Carpet® Pink. Find out more at www.tesselaar.com.

Grows 60-80cm tall x 1m wideFlowers late spring till winter Likes sun and well drained soil

Page 9: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Donation to Alzheimers NZ on every plant purchased

In-store or online for more information

Living Fashionwww.livingfashion.co.nz

QR Scan with your smart phone for our full

Dianthus range (requires QR Reader download from your App Store)

Grow your memories to support theirs

Dianthus‘Memories’

®

Page 10: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot
Page 11: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

rea

l g

ard

en

ers

Sarah Thornton finds a thriving organic garden that feeds a community - in more ways than one.

Gardens are created for a number of reasons; some to simply marvel at for their beauty, some

to relax in, some to shade and feed us. But there’s a garden in the Hastings suburb of Flaxmere that has been created to fulfil a different need; the healing of a community.

Flaxmere often makes the news for the wrong reasons – crime, social deprivation and gang activity. Councillor and relentlessly optimistic Flaxmere campaigner Henare O’Keefe is deeply involved in creating more positive futures for his community and in 2008, through his U-Turn Trust and the Te Aranga Marae, the Flaxmere Community Garden was established. Five years on, it’s flourishing.

Tilling the hearts of a community

Left: Busy in the garden in early spring are (from left to right) Jason Dolden, Pam O’Keefe, Gary Barclay, Steve Sinclair and Melissa Wharewhiti.

Below: Te Aranga Marae.

gogardening.co.nz 11

Page 12: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

“The garden has fed hundreds, if not thousands of people,” says Henare. “I love the fact that it is owned by the people and fulfils its purpose. But it’s almost like the food is a bonus – the garden has a very important social function in that it brings the whole community together,” he says.

The organic garden is set on 5.3 hectares and consists of large vegetable plots and an orchard. It is open 24 hours a day, seven days a week for people from all over the region to help themselves. Funded mostly by “good will” from corporates, the community and a huge number of volunteers, the day to day running of the garden is managed by Gary Barclay, who also runs two ILP (Onsite Education) NCEA Level 3 and 4 horticulture courses at the site.

Although almost every vegetable imaginable is grown, root vegetables and brassicas make up the bulk of the plantings. “Brassica family vegetables such as broccoli, cabbage and

cauliflower are popular, as are the root vegetables like potatoes and parsnips. Silverbeet is also very popular as it’s an essential ingredient in traditional boil ups – we harvest around 1200 of those every year,” says Gary.

Educating the community is a big part of Gary’s work and also ensures longevity of the crops. “If we teach people about the correct way to harvest, we can get more out of a plant, for example, if you break off a broccoli head in the right place, will get you a second flowering – and more growth equals more food,” he explains.

As well as the “staples”, Gary is constantly looking at growing other vegetables that are rich in nutrients and that also have a longer producing life, such as kale.

The community garden is completely organic, and uses its own compost based on the “lasagne” method, with layers of cardboard, paper, clippings, small prunings and manure, covered with carpet. “We

have two composting stations on each garden area and as we harvest, we chop and dig in straight away,” Gary explains. Sprays are not used and Gary says he’s “never seen a snail”. Systems and processes have been developed over the years to ensure maximum productivity.

“We are more methodical now,” says Gary. “We keep comprehensive diaries and have a plan for each plot. At the moment we’re resting a couple of plots – it’s essential to rotate crops and ensure the soil is healthy.

Clockwise from top left: An old bath is now a worm

farm; kale is a favourite crop at the gardens; a blackboard

lets visitors know what’s ready to pick; the permaculture

garden is always colourful; many plants are grown from

seed in the shade house.

rea

l ga

rde

ne

rs

Masterpiece Tumbler Scarlet

Impatiens Tumbler has the perfect spreading trailing habit for all your hanging baskets, patio pots and mixed planters around your house. Perfect for masses of colour in morning sun to semi-shade positions, Tumbler will impress you with its profusion of flower power all spring, summer and autumn.

Look out for the entire Masterpiece Tumbler Impatiens series available now at your local Garden Centre.

Available in 7 highly fashionable colours, Tumbler Pink, Tumbler Rose, Tumbler Rose Star, Tumbler Salmon, Tumbler Scarlet, Tumbler Violet Star & Tumbler White.

TumblerNew Series

AD 1

3/64

7FL

AME_

SYCR

566_

08/1

3

Note: While Flame™ has taken great care in preparing this artwork responsibility for the printed artwork and copy accuracy lies with the client. The printer is responsible for checking artwork before plates are made, accuracy in measurements, plates tolerance requirements, registration and construction detailing. Any questions please contact flame before proceeding with the job. Copyright 2013 Flame. SP

Mina Giang (account service) | [email protected] | +61 2 9887 8500 | flame.com.au

Name: FLAME_SYCR566_GO GARDENING T&Mnursery_Spring_Tumbler_Impatiens

Date: 02.08.13 | Round: FSize: 134mmH x 210Wmm

FLAME_SYCR566_GO GARDENING T&Mnursery_Spring_Tumbler_Impatiens-F.indd 1 2/08/13 12:19 PM

Page 13: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Problems with clay, don’t delay

Apply now to improve soil quality and achieve healthy, vibrant gardens and lawnsClayBreaker™ has the unique ability to break up clay and loosen hard compacted soils enabling air, water and nutrients to penetrate plant roots. Apply now to help prevent hard, dry and cracked soil this summer. Available in 8kg and 25kg bags.

www.claybreaker.co.nz

Masterpiece Tumbler Scarlet

Impatiens Tumbler has the perfect spreading trailing habit for all your hanging baskets, patio pots and mixed planters around your house. Perfect for masses of colour in morning sun to semi-shade positions, Tumbler will impress you with its profusion of flower power all spring, summer and autumn.

Look out for the entire Masterpiece Tumbler Impatiens series available now at your local Garden Centre.

Available in 7 highly fashionable colours, Tumbler Pink, Tumbler Rose, Tumbler Rose Star, Tumbler Salmon, Tumbler Scarlet, Tumbler Violet Star & Tumbler White.

TumblerNew Series

AD 1

3/64

7FL

AME_

SYCR

566_

08/1

3

Note: While Flame™ has taken great care in preparing this artwork responsibility for the printed artwork and copy accuracy lies with the client. The printer is responsible for checking artwork before plates are made, accuracy in measurements, plates tolerance requirements, registration and construction detailing. Any questions please contact flame before proceeding with the job. Copyright 2013 Flame. SP

Mina Giang (account service) | [email protected] | +61 2 9887 8500 | flame.com.au

Name: FLAME_SYCR566_GO GARDENING T&Mnursery_Spring_Tumbler_Impatiens

Date: 02.08.13 | Round: FSize: 134mmH x 210Wmm

FLAME_SYCR566_GO GARDENING T&Mnursery_Spring_Tumbler_Impatiens-F.indd 1 2/08/13 12:19 PM

Page 14: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Plants and seeds come from a range of sources – education provider ILP in New Plymouth, public donations and often from those who have harvested, “returning the favour”.

Over the next twelve months, Gary is reconfiguring the garden into six main plots, each measuring 53m by 20m. Corporates and individuals including Whole Foods USA, John Bostock, Anna Archibald, Unison and Holcim are helping with the transformation, providing guidance and funding for the work. As well as incorporating the existing plantings, the garden will have plots much like the English ‘allotments’ for Samoan and Tongan communities and schools. The orchard is also being extended and a citrus plot is planned for 2014. In two weeks’ time, volunteers will get their gumboots on and plant more than 1600 native trees to protect the garden against the prevailing westerly.

The garden is a much loved and revered part of Flaxmere. “We’re not only growing vegetables here,” says Henare. “We’re growing relationships, understanding and tolerance. And we’re growing a community.”

rea

l ga

rde

ne

rs

14 go gardening spring

Left, clockwise from top: emerging onion seedlings; cabbage and calendulas; straw mulch keeps weeds out and moisture in while feeding the soil for the next crop; popular brassicas, kale and cavolo nero.

Below: Manager Gary Barclay (right) with horticulture student, Jason Dolden.

Page 15: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

gogardening.co.nz 15

Tui’s School Garden

Challenge now in it’s

4th year has motivated

hundreds of Pre-School,

Primary and Intermediate Schools to

get pupils involved in gardening.

Over 300 schools registered

in the first week of this year’s

competition. The competition

demands not only a top gardening

result, but the documentation of

the entire learning journey of the

students and their mentors in

arriving at the end result. Schools are

asked to plan, create and maintain

a new or existing garden, so a great

first step is for the schools to come

up with a planting plan. Schools are

encouraged to be innovative and have

a focus on sustainability, for example

implementing composting and worm

farms, collecting rainwater, and using

recycled material in the garden.

Communities can follow their

school’s progress as students post

their pictures and update their

blogs on the Tui Website www.

tuigarden.co.nz/school-garden-

challenge. You can also vote for

your favourite school on the Tui

website, and the school with the

most votes will win the People’s

Choice Award.

Final updates will be posted

by 25th October and schools

will anxiously await the judges

decisions on the winners for each

Category.

Eager to get underway with their 2013 gardens from left: Hinds School Mid Canterbury, St Albans Catholic School, and Bayview Kindergarten Auckland

SCHOOLS COMPETE FOR GARDENING HONOURSTauranga based Tui Products is challenging schools throughout New Zealand to produce the best school garden. But this year members of each school’s community are invited to get involved.

ad

vert

ori

al

TUI PURCHASES CAN HELP YOUR SCHOOL Buy any Tui branded products from a participating garden centre, give the receipt to your local school, and they can win a Duratuf shed, Tui products and a visit from Annabel Langbein!

One lucky school supporter will win a trip to Wanaka for two to have dinner with Annabel Langbein in Wanaka. Simply put your contact details on the receipt for Tui products before you hand it over to the school.

Visit www.tuigarden.co.nz/school-garden-challenge to find your local participating schools and garden centres.

Page 16: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot
Page 17: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Greens to go!Sarah O’Neil explores the delights of growing a constant supply of

fresh healthy greens to feed the family - 365 days of the year.

ed

ible

sE at your greens! This has

the cry from mothers for generations as they lovingly prepare nutritious

meals for their families only to find their offspring are completely unenthusiastic about the leafy green portion on their plates. It doesn’t really matter how it has been prepared – in a salad, stir fry or side dish, kids seem to have a natural aversion to all things green served to them.

But there is such a wonderful array of leafy green vegetables and even more amazing ways to prepare them, that to avoid a whole food group based solely on colour seems a

little misguided, especially as they are actually really good for you. They are loaded with vitamins and minerals, dietary fibre and all sorts of good things for growing bodies and anybody for that matter.

The very best way to get the most flavour and nutrients out of your leafy greens is to eat them as fresh as possible, and the best way to ensure they are as fresh as possible is to grow them yourself. The good news is growing your own leafy greens isn’t expensive, doesn’t take up much space and is actually really easy - so simple a child could do it. Getting a child to help out can

make things easier at the dinner table as a child who grows something is more likely to eat it willingly.

In the cooler months we desire greens that benefit from being cooked like silverbeet or the more glamorous rainbow beets, iron rich spinach, Asian greens, and the popular super food of the season – kale. For winter use, these crops are planted in autumn, but they grow well in spring too. You can harvest the leaves as you need them and preparing these gourmet greens has come a long way from the good old days when cabbage was boiled within an inch of its life. Today’s

gogardening.co.nz 17

Page 18: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

18 go gardening spring

greens are cooked quickly to retain as many nutrients as possible, and have a vibrant bright green appearance that looks and tastes much better than the soggy grey of old.

Early spring is a great time to grow microgreens on your sunniest window sill, so you can be eating something fresh and crunchy while it’s still wet and wintry outdoors. There are specific microgreen seeds available or you could grow a selection of your favourite veggies. Sprinkle the seeds quite thickly and once the seedlings are a few centimetres tall with their first set of true leaves, cut them off with a pair of scissors and enjoy the nutrient rich salad crunch that is ready for harvest in less than two weeks.

As the days get longer, we start to look forward to BBQs and alfresco dining, and an essential part of this experience is the salad. Whether it is a traditional iceberg lettuce (back in vogue!) or a mesculun mix with a balsamic dressing, a salad is a summer staple. There is nothing more satisfying than popping out into your garden and harvesting a few leaves that get sprinkled in dressing moments later.

The key to a constant supply of salad greens throughout the warmer months is to plant little and often. While a crisp fresh salad is what we feel like most on a hot summer’s day, the irony is that most salad greens actually prefer cooler weather. When temperatures rise they can quickly bolt to seed

and taste bitter. The best way around this is to plant about half a dozen seedlings every couple of weeks throughout the summer months, whether you are sowing your own seed or buying seedlings from your garden centre. Harvest any plants as soon as there is the slightest hint of bitterness coming through in the leaves. That way you can always guarantee that you will have the sweetest, tender leaves every time. Planting often can also allow you to try a variety of different salad ingredients throughout the season.

The widest choice of different salad greens comes from growing your own. Basically, there two kinds of lettuce – the loose leaf variety, where you can take the outer leaves as the plant grows. This is often referred to

ed

ible

s

Page 19: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

as ‘cut and come again’ as you can harvest repeatedly from the same plant and it will keep on growing. Then there are the kind of lettuces that form a solid heart and it is best to harvest the whole plant. These can take up to eight weeks to mature, whereas the loose leaf varieties can be harvested within three weeks as tender baby greens.

Whether you prefer the spicy flavours of rocket and mustard greens, or the more sweet and nutty flavours of Buttercrunch lettuce, they can all be grown simply and easily in your garden or in a container by your backdoor. Garden centres offer a fantastic array of salad plants in punnets, including mixed packs of different shapes and colours so you are able to have an amazing mixed leaf salad that will tempt the pickiest of eaters.

Large flowers in vibrant colours

Versatile in baskets, containers and beds

Heat tolerant so blooms all summer

Superb habit

COLOUR SOLUTIONZ

visit our website for garden design inspiration, planting advice and plant care www.gardeningsolutionz.co.nzavailable from good garden retailers nationwide

Page 20: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Seeds also offer a great deal of choice and you can purchase a specific lettuce or a mixed packet which gives you an assortment of salad leaves throughout the whole season. However, be careful not to sow the seeds all at once as there are generally around 1000 seeds in a packet. So unless you want a slimy mess – less is more!

ed

ible

s

LETTUCE TIPS:,The faster your lettuces grow, the better they’ll taste. Don’t let them run out of water or nutrients.

,If your garden soil is not well drained plant lettuces in container mix.

,In hot summer weather some afternoon shade is beneficial.

,Lettuces need lots of nitrogen but other nutrients too. For those growing in pots, supplement slow release fertiliser with liquid fertiliser or worm tea from your worm farm.

,For the best nutrition and flavour, pick leaves fresh for each meal rather than storing them in the fridge.

An easy option for those unfamiliar with growing from seed, Yates Fusion range of seeds ensures a great crop of mixed greens. Ideal for planting containers, the seeds are combined in special clay pellets. Each pellet contains an interesting mix of lettuce varieties that will all germinate at the same time. The packet advises how many pellets you need for the size of your container.

Growing your greens in your garden is the freshest possible way to make sure that often maligned portion on the plate is elevated to the star of meal, and the cry ‘Eat your greens’ will be an invitation willingly accepted by everyone at the table. All year round.

20 go gardening spring

Yates ‘Fusion’ mix

TIP: Mix herbs

and lettuces for colourful

displays in pots.

Page 21: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

DOUBLE UP™

Tomatoes and potatoes on the same plant? For real!

In what is a New Zealand first, and quite possibly a world first, Bay of Plenty based incredible edibles® nursery releases a

novel new plant this spring. Potato Tom™ produces a crop of sweet and juicy ‘Gardener’s Delight’

gogardening.co.nz 21

ad

vert

ori

al

tomatoes, followed by a crop of your favourite ‘Agria’ potatoes.

Andrew Boylan, general manager of incredible edibles® says that the idea of grafting a tomato with a potato isn’t new; because potatoes and tomatoes are in the same plant family, a tomato will happily grow on the roots of a potato. But he believes this could be the first time anyone has succeeded at a commercial level. “Potato Tom™ is the perfect combination that produces a good crop of both potatoes and beautiful cherry tomatoes. You get tomatoes in summer, potatoes in autumn.”

“We aim to bring new and exciting edible plants and ideas to the market on a regular basis,” says Andrew, adding that shrinking urban spaces mean multifunctional plants are increasingly in demand.

Available in garden centres from late September. Find out more at www.edible.co.nz

HOW TO GROW POTATO TOM™Anyone who has grown tomatoes can grow a Potato Tom™. Treat and grow it as a tomato. As the crop of tomatoes grows the Agria potatoes are developing below. Once the tomatoes are all harvested, it is simply a case of digging up the potatoes. As with any tomato, it pays to avoid frosts. Choose a sunny spot and plant in fertile, compost rich soil or growing media. Stake and train as normal. Good news for apartment dwellers, Potato Tom™ also grows happily in a large container.

TIP: For best results, feed Potato Tom™ with Dalton’s

incredible edibles® Potato Fertiliser and add Dalton’s Vegetable Mix

to the soil (or your container) prior to planting.

Choose a

sunny spot and

plant in fertile,

compost

rich soil

Look for these plants at a Go Gardening Garden Centre near you. To locate stockists go to www.gogardening.co.nz

PROUDLY GROWN BY INCREDIBLE EDIBLES

TH

INK

ST

OC

K.C

OM

TH

INK

ST

OC

K.C

OM

Page 22: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

ON THE SNAIL TRAILSlugs and snails must be spring’s most despicable garden pests. Sarah O’Neil considers her options.

pe

sts

The garden is a dangerous place for young seedlings. The biggest threat comes from terrible creatures

with their hearts set on devouring our precious seedlings. Slugs and snails, with their slimy icky bodies are no friend in the garden.

There are many ways of keeping your plants safe from these pests. Some are a guaranteed success, others have been tried and tested and shown to be mostly reliable. Others seem hit-and-miss at best.

Personally I don’t want to risk my crop on something that may not work, so I always reach for the little blue pellets – namely Yates Blitzem. To prevent the chickens or other animals from eating them or my seedlings, I put wire netting around my crop. If you are concerned about other creatures, put pellets in an upturned ice cream container with little doorways cut into it and remove the dead snail bodies first thing each morning. There are also pellets available that are safe for pets and wildlife. Try Tui Quash Slug & Snail Stoppa.

If you want to try something more natural, there are alternative methods that have varying degrees of success.

Hunting and gathering: This is best done at night with a torch as this is when slugs and snails are most active. What you do with them once you catch them depends on how brave you are. If you aren’t too squeamish you can squish them quickly and firmly so they don’t see it coming; or you could feed them to the chooks. I wouldn’t recommend over the fence as the neighbours won’t be pleased and I have heard of a study where the snails were marked and taken away from the garden at varying distances and many actually came back.

Planking: Put a plank down in the garden for them to hide under after a hard night of eating your plants and all you need to do is lift the plank in the morning and pick them off and dispose of them as you will.

Beer: Slugs and snails love a good party and are drawn to beer like moths to a flame. Take an old margarine container and bury it in your garden so it is level with the surface and fill it with beer. In the morning the container will be filled with drowned snails - as if the party had been advertised on Facebook!

Crushed eggshells: This is a popular technique. The theory is that slugs and snail’s soft bellies get all torn up on the sharp edges and they don’t like the way it feels, however I have seen pictures of snails crawling over razor blades so I’m not completely convinced about this one.

Copper: If you wrap a 5cm strip of copper around your pot, raised bed or plant, when the slug and snail slime comes in contact with the copper an electrical charge is created and they get a zap. This appears to have mixed results as once the copper oxidises it isn’t as effective and slugs and snails are quite cunning and will find a way around or over it.

Salt: Sprinkling salt about can kill them quickly, however use it sparingly as you can make your soil hostile for your plants.

Coffee grinds: Many people swear by coffee grounds as a way of deterring slugs and snails, and caffeine has proven to be toxic to them, however there is uncertainty how effective this actually is with used coffee grounds. They do make fabulous mulch and will make your plants happy if they survive being eaten.

Wool: The latest thing overseas for keeping slugs away is sheep wool pellets, which apparently irritate the slug and have the added benefit of providing slow release nutrients to the growing plants.

Whatever method you chose, it is most satisfying to see your plants grow past the vulnerable stage and give you beautiful flowers or something delicious to eat. Don’t let these pests prevent you from reaping the rewards of your hard work in the garden.

22 go gardening spring

TH

INK

ST

OC

K.C

OM

Page 23: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Michelia ‘Inspiration’ PVR

An upright, dense flowering shrub

or small tree. Masses of fragrant

porcelain-like flowers in mid spring.

Ideal for smaller gardens

Jasminium ‘Southern Stars’ PVRLarge white fragrant flowers

with a pink blush. Easy to grow. Excellent hedging or espalier

against wall or fence.Available from most Garden Centres

Brilliant Garden Stars

Page 24: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

www.co lourwave.co.nzAvai lab le now f rom a l l good garden reta i lers

Pink Julip

Dark Cherry

Moonlight

Banana

Colour it in...

Summer starts with

Page 25: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Bringing the outdoors in

Sue Linn finds a beautiful Nelson garden designed to be enjoyed as much from indoors as out.

rea

l g

ard

en

ers

gogardening.co.nz 25

Adrienne Lorimer has cultivated a number of different gardens over the years, some of them

quite large. But when she and husband Duncan moved from Christchurch to sunny Nelson, their vision was clear. “Now that we’re

getting older, we wanted a small, easy care garden”, says Adrienne.

As well as a new garden, they were building a brand new house and were able to make the most of the opportunities that come from starting from scratch. For example, as Adrienne explains, “When the house

was in the design stage we decided to have windows down to the floor in the downstairs rooms so it would feel like we were almost in the garden.”

Although the top level of their two-storied house gives them the most panoramic views, Adrienne and Duncan decided they wanted

www.co lourwave.co.nzAvai lab le now f rom a l l good garden reta i lers

Pink Julip

Dark Cherry

Moonlight

Banana

Colour it in...

Summer starts with

Page 26: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

26 go gardening spring

their living room and master bedroom suite to be downstairs, for easier living if the stairs became an inconvenience.

Their downstairs view of sea, sky and hills forms an idyllic backdrop to Adrienne and Duncan’s colourful and beautifully maintained garden. And it seems that every window frames a picture-perfect scene. “We do enjoy looking out at the garden from most of the windows in the house, and love the sea view that changes all the time with the tides.”

Adrienne has chosen a planting scheme of mainly green, white, soft yellows and blues to complement the view rather than distract from it. There are occasional splashes of colour such as her deep apricot ‘Sunny Honey’ and ‘Mutabilis’ roses. Pathways and pots are in soft natural colours.

rea

l ga

rde

ne

rs

GETTING HELP To help them with the garden

layout, the couple consulted landscape designer, Nigel Monk, who drew up the plan for the garden and also implemented it. They’d planned to do all the work themselves but Adrienne had a hip replacement just weeks after they shifted into the house and, “Once we saw Nigel and his assistant doing all the hard work we realised such heavy work was beyond us”, she says. The landscapers leveled the section for the lawn and put in the retaining rock wall. They also built a raised vege garden, installed the trellis fences, and laid the path and lawn edgings.

A couple of steps up from the pea gravel pathway on the east side of the house lies a flat area of lawn. How do they keep it so

smooth and green? “The lawn was readylawn so it looked good from day one,” tells Adrienne. “We strive to keep it well watered in the summer. To keep on top of dandelions and other weeds we both spray and dig them out with a special tool we got from Mitre 10. Duncan also puts lawn fertiliser on every year”.

The garden is now four years old and they’re delighted with it, even though Adrienne agrees there are some concessions you have to make when you’re a keen gardener with less space than you’ve enjoyed in the past.

“I think with a smaller site you have to identify your favourite plants and try to limit the number of different species.” If she had more space she’d grow her favourite hydrangeas and favourite trees such as dogwood and variegated elm.

Previous page: Flower Carpet roses border the main pathway. Below, from left: Neighbours Rachael, Greer and Tash are regular visitors in Adrienne and Duncan’s garden. Sheltering the garden seat are black flax and other wind hardy natives; Adrienne and Duncan enjoy watching the birds bathing from their living room window; Adrienne and Greer with Mutabilis rose.

Page 27: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

“Also you need to make sure your plants are appropriate for the growing conditions of the site,”, stresses Adrienne. The soil is poor and with hindsight they wish they had brought in a big load of topsoil when the garden was laid out. “It didn’t occur to us until after it was all done!” she confesses.

NEW CHALLENGESAs well as imperfect soil, they have wind to

contend with. “Because we are very exposed it has limited our choices in plants, trees especially. I would have loved to have had lots of maple trees but they don’t do well up here in the wind.” Mainly, they have planted native trees, such as Pittosporum, Griselinia and pukas, which are doing well. Three ‘Little Gem’ magnolias are also doing well, although as Adrienne explains, “when it’s very wet in the winter we get a lot of runoff from the section behind us, which causes the magnolias to drop more leaves.”

In summer they have the opposite problem when the garden gets very dry and Adrienne spends a lot of time watering. An automatic watering system would help, she notes. “We are lucky that

Ask for EzyStrike at your local garden retailer

www.burnets.co.nz

EzyStrike3 Ezy Ways to Strike a Lawn

• All purpose lawn• Grass grub control

• Ideal for hot and dry conditions

• Grass grub control

• Weed killer• Moss killer• Lawn food• Soil conditioner

• Ideal for shady places

• Grass grub control

‘Strike a lawn in under 7 days’(Ideal conditions)

Burnets-GoGardening-Jul13-100x275.indd 1 7/08/13 4:19 PM

Page 28: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

we installed a tank to collect the roof water so we always have that to use on the garden and I don’t feel like I am using up the natural resources”.

Low maintenance was an important part of the design brief for this garden, but Adrienne and Duncan enjoy the time they spend in it. Duncan does the lawns and any heavy work while Adrienne does most of the planting and general maintenance. “We have bark mulch on all the garden beds so weeds are easy to keep under control. I pick out weeds when I see them as I walk around the garden. Apart from early spring and late autumn the garden doesn’t take much time to keep, but I do like just pottering around in it to keep it tidy.”

rea

l ga

rde

ne

rs

A raised vege garden is nestled neatly behind a fence in a sunny corner of the garden. They love the fact that the raised beds make it so easy to plant, cultivate and harvest. “We grow lettuces year round and cherry tomatoes in the summer. We also usually have perpetual spinach growing, as it does very well and is handy to have. We grow radishes, dwarf beans and strawberries. This year we have also planted leeks and celery, which are just about ready to harvest.”

Adrienne says she finds gardening very relaxing, adding “there is also a lot of pleasure gained from looking out the window and marveling at the things each season brings – for example the tulips, cherry blossom and the michelias in spring!”

DESIGN TIP:

Faster than hedges,

trellis with climbing

plants attractively

screen utility areas

and divide garden

rooms.

Cleverly designed raised vege beds have wide edges at a comfortable height for sitting.

28 go gardening spring

Page 29: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

4x Go Gardening Mag ads275x210mmS.indd 3 18/07/13 8:54 PM

Page 30: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Larger flowers and more

compact growth make

Nemesias better than ever!

Nemesia ‘Raspberries and Cream’ Nemesia ‘Strawberry Ripple’

Nemesia ‘Blueberry Ripple’ Nemesia ‘Berries and Cream’

30 go gardening spring

Page 31: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Nemesias originate from

the sandy coastal regions

of South Africa. Their

‘cheeky little faces’

appear on mass from late winter

to early spring, quickly forming a

delightful carpet of soft mauves,

blues and pinks. As one of the earliest

perennials to flower, they are valued

for their ability to quickly transform

the barren post-winter garden with

colour and fragrance.

UK breeder Martine Tellwright

has dedicated much of her life

to breeding nemesias with larger

flowers, and more compact growth.

The new fragrant ‘Berry Delight’ nemesias are the spectacular

results of this breeding program.

The creamy bi-colours are a

breakthrough colour combination,

not seen before in perennial

nemesias. The plants were also

selected for exceptional hardiness

and form.

Ideal as ground covers,

‘Berry Delight’ nemesias quickly

spread to form a colourful mat

approximately 60cm across. With

adequate watering, they are also

spectacular in hanging baskets

and pots.

Nemesias thrive in light,

moist and well-drained soils in

full sun and will benefit from the

addition of compost and fertiliser

to fuel their extreme flowering

performance and support long-

term health. These hardy and easy

care perennials have very few pest

or disease problems making them

very suitable for the gardener

preferring a ‘no fuss’ plant.

Flowering does continue

with these new hybrids for an

extended period well into spring.

For more information visit

www.livingfashion.co.nz

BERRY DELIGHT

CARE TIPS ,Keep moist but ensure good drainage and friable soil

,Compost and slow release fertilisers will assist optimum flowering performance

,Avoid intense afternoon sun as nemesias prefer morning sun

,Keep moist but ensure good drainage and friable soil

,Prune by half and apply a slow release fertiliser after flowering to maintain vigour

Nemesias are savoured as the entrée to a spring cottage garden with those magical first blooms, now bigger and more fragrant than ever!

PROUDLY BROUGHT TO YOU BY LIVING FASHION

gogardening.co.nz 31

ad

vert

ori

al

Nemesia ‘Blueberry Ripple’

Nemesia ‘Strawberry Ripple’

Nemesia ‘Raspberries and Cream’

Page 32: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

pra

ctical a

dv

ice

TIME SAVERSA garden is a place to relax and unwind. If yours sometimes feels more like the opposite, here are twelve ways you can make your garden less time consuming.

1 Start well. Before planting, prepare the ground

thoroughly and be sure to get rid of all perennial weeds, especially if you are planting groundcovers. For effective weed eradication on larger areas, glysophate (aka Roundup) is one of the best time savers we have. For difficult woody weeds ask advice at your garden centre or go to www.weedbusters.co.nz.

2 Cover the ground with mulch or mat forming

plants to keep the weeds down and conserve water. Top up with organic mulch every spring.

3 Choose plants that love your soil and climate.

4 Select disease resistant varieties for an ever-healthy

garden that never needs to be sprayed. For example, if you like roses, consider disease resistant Flower Carpet roses. Read more on page 48.

5 Plant mainly trees and shrubs. As their roots grow

deeper into the ground, trees and shrubs grow more and more self sufficient with age, surviving the summer with little or no water. Take care to choose those that will not outgrow their space in your time frame.

6 Patience pays. Beware of plants that grow so

quickly that they need constant trimming or replacing after a short time. Plant mostly slow growing evergreens that only need trimming once every few years if at all.

7 Raise the height of garden beds, especially vege beds.

This not only makes for easier maintenance, but also improves drainage.

8 Invest in quality tools and maintain them well.

Many garden centres offer a tool sharpening service.

9 Grow flowering annuals in pots instead of garden

beds. A few big pots are easier to care for than lots of little ones.

10 Invest in hard surfaces. A well-

designed and constructed patio or deck takes a lot less work than an expanse of lawn.

11 Install a watering system, ideally with a

timer. It will help save water, as well as time.

12 Keep it simple. When designing a garden, avoid

complicated wiggly edges. Straight lines and bold sweeping curves are easier to maintain. Small areas of lawn that are tricky to access may be less work if mass planted in easy-care groundcovers.

32 go gardening spring

Page 33: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Ask for Phostrogen at your local garden retailer

www.burnets.co.nz

• All purpose soluble food for a healthy garden and lawns

• Use on all indoor and outdoor plants

• 4 convenient sizes

Available mid September

Makes 120 watering cans of plant food at the same cost of 80

watering cans of plant food

Ask for

50% Extra

Burnets-GoGardening-Jul13-100x275.indd 2 7/08/13 4:20 PM

www.rainbowpark.co.nz

• New bold and bright colours• Large showy flowers and disease resistant

• Perfect for tubs or pretty borders in the garden

Plant now and enjoy continuous flowering from spring until the first frost.

TAMARINDA®

New Guinea Impatiens

Available at all leading garden retailers

Page 34: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

KIDSGrow a

head

In a week or so, your Harriet or Harry will have green hair! And give them a haircut if you find strange hair growing out

of their nose or eye!

1 Decorate your sock or stocking with eyes and other bits

and pieces.

2 Put some lawn seed in the sock end and then fill it with

soil, potting mix or compost. Fill the sock until the face is

filled out and the mix is packed tightly. Tie a knot in the

end of the stocking.

3 Hang your sock or stocking over a jar filled with water

and leave it inside in a sunny, warm place.

• Sock or stockings (ask mum for a ‘knee-high’)

• Things to decorate your head such as eyes

• Lawn seed • A jar • Soil or potting mix

You will

need

Call her

Harriet, call him

Harry. Whatever

the name, it’s

going to have a

hairy head!

34 go gardening spring

Page 35: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Grow a

head The hair gets long quickly but that’s no problem – just cut it off and eat it!

For a faster growing hairy head, use empty, clean eggshells and cress seed. Simply decorate or draw a face on the shell and put it in an eggcup. Put in a little bit of cotton wool or tissue and then carefully put some soil or potting mix in. Sprinkle the cress seed on top and water lightly. In a few days, your head will have some hair!

Egg head!

• Sock or stockings (ask mum for a ‘knee-high’)

• Things to decorate your head such as eyes

• Lawn seed • A jar • Soil or potting mix

What do plants need to grow?Unscramble each of the clue words.Copy the letters in the numbered cells to other cells with the same number.

GHTISLUN

RETWA

INRTSETNU

RIA

3 4

5

7

2

6

1

21 1 6 3 73 4 5 3

Get snapping for our

garden photo

competition!

gogardening.co.nz 35

We’d love to see what you’ve been up to you in your garden at home.

Fancy yourself as a photographer? Well then grab your camera and start looking around your garden for some interesting, beautiful or downright strange plants, flowers, or creatures. Or if you’ve got your own garden, take a snap and let us know what you’ve planted. Anything goes – just use your imagination!

, Email us your photo, your age, contact details and a description of what’s in the photo to [email protected] by Tuesday 1 October 2013.

We’ll select two of the best entries and the photos will be published in the summer issue of Go Gardening.

Each winner will receive a $50 Go Gardening gift card to spend at your Go Gardening centre.

P O O Y

TH

INK

ST

OC

K.C

OM

Page 36: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Kiwi iconFor the first New Zealanders it was indispensible; used in clothing, shelter, for

catching and storing food, and as medicine. In the early 1900s its fibre was one of our

most important exports. These days flax endures as one of our most important plants,

in the fine art of weaving, in our natural environment - and in our gardens.

36 go gardening spring36 go gardening spring

Page 37: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

The main difference between flax now and flax a hundred years ago is the explosion of different colours and forms, so unique and beautiful that they are

sought after by gardeners all over the world. In the wild there are two main species.

Phormium tenax (harakeke or swamp flax) reaches two or three metres tall, its stiff upright leaves and flower spikes rising as high as five metres. This is the flax used in maori weaving. It is also the one to plant if you have wet ground or want to plant a shelter that doubles as a bird magnet. The towering flower spikes attract tui and other nectar seeking birds.

Phormium cookianum (wharariki or mountain flax) is shorter in stature with long twisted seed capsules. In the wild, two quite distinct forms of this species exist; one with weeping foliage, the other with stiff foliage. Phormium cookianum typically grows in coastal and mountain areas.

These native species have donated their genes to today’s countless modern cultivars. The main focus in recent times has been on increasing the range of colourful little flaxes suitable for our smaller gardens. Smaller flaxes also make fantastic container plants. With so many colourful varieties, it’s hard go past flax for year-round colour. Use it as an accent, for mass planting on difficult slopes, for large pots and in mixed shrub plantings to invite more birds into your garden.

Generally, the smaller cookianum types prefer well drained soil and are the most

tolerant of dry conditions. They’re also best for windy sites. Tall Phormium texax can suffer from shredded leaves in heavy wind. On the other hand, it is useful for soaking up excess moisture, including fluid from septic tanks.

For small gardens in need of a plain green flax, Phormium cookianum ‘Green Dwarf’ is superb. Just 75cm tall, it has stiff upright foliage and beautiful yellow flowers, great for picking.

From left to right: Phormium ‘Jester’, Phormium ‘Yellow Wave’, Phormium ‘Rainbow Chief’

gogardening.co.nz 37 gogardening.co.nz 37

na

tive

s

Page 38: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

38 go gardening spring

Heuchera ‘Apple Crisp’

Heuchera ‘Obsidian’

Heuchera ‘Marmalade’

Heucherella ‘Alabama Sunrise’

Available at your garden centre or by mail www.parvaplants.co.nz

Living Fashionwww.livingfashion.co.nz

HeucherasTextured Foliage Effects

QR Scan with your smart phone for our full

Heuchera range (requires QR Reader download from your App Store)

Page 39: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

From left to right: Phormium ‘Evening Glow’; Phormium ‘Green Dwarf’; Phormium ‘Veneer’; Phormium ‘Dark Delight’

MAKING THE MOST OF FLAX,For best colour and healthy compact growth, plant

in full sun.

,Most of the low growing, colourful flaxes prefer well drained soils.

,Avoid very sheltered locations to minimize pests such as scale insect and mealy bug. An insecticide mixed with spraying oil is an effective control for these pests. Mixing in detergent or spray fixing agent will help it stick. Alternatively remove pests with a soft brush and soapy water.

,Most flax varieties are fairly frost hardy. If they are damaged by frost, refrain from removing the burned outer leaves until the risk of frost has passed.

,Water young plants in dry spells and feed in spring with slow release fertiliser.

,To keep flax tidy, cut old foliage cleanly from the base with a sharp knife. Plain green growth appearing on coloured varieties should be removed before it takes over.

,Lift and divide every few years to keep flax plants looking fresh.

HOW TO LIFT AND DIVIDE FLAXSpring is a good time to rejuvenate flax

plants and propagate more plants for your garden by lifting and dividing. Ideally it is done every few years. You’ll need a strong spade, a good sharp knife and bit of brute strength.

First dig up the entire plant. Then divide it into sections, each with some roots and a fan of foliage. Don’t worry if you break some roots. They’re very tough. Trim long or damaged roots and trim the foliage by about half to make a fan shape. Replant into good, compost-enriched soil and water well.

Heuchera ‘Apple Crisp’

Heuchera ‘Obsidian’

Heuchera ‘Marmalade’

Heucherella ‘Alabama Sunrise’

Available at your garden centre or by mail www.parvaplants.co.nz

Living Fashionwww.livingfashion.co.nz

HeucherasTextured Foliage Effects

QR Scan with your smart phone for our full

Heuchera range (requires QR Reader download from your App Store)

na

tive

s

gogardening.co.nz 39

Bronze-red ‘Sweet Mist’ used here as a border, is one

of the most compact flaxes available.

Page 40: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Spring in bloom

tree

s an

d sh

rub

s

40 go gardening spring

Page 41: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Eagerly anticipated, exciting and colourful, spring is one big glamorous party with superstar guests in very best dress.

The early arrivers come in all shapes and guises – from the elegant michelias with their evocative fragrance, to

the dazzling brilliance of magnolias, rhododendrons and bridal white viburnums. It’s a party worth celebrating as it only comes round once a year; every garden deserves at least one showy flowering tree or shrub to welcome the new season. If the flowering of some seems all too brief, remember there is an upside; generally the shorter the season, the more spectacular the display. And like the best fireworks it’s one worth waiting for.

A long-living tree or shrub is an investment you should only have to plant once. Pick one to suit your climate and site then plant it with care, and it’ll bloom bigger and brighter with each passing spring, providing flowers for picking, as well as food for the birds and bees.

STAR PERFORMERS Magnolias are among the

gardening world’s most famous flowering trees and there is one to fit almost every garden. Rounded shrubs just 2m tall, the star magnolias (Magnolia x soulangeana) are a good option for compact gardens. The saucer magnolias (Magnolia soulangeana varieties) are

Fairy Magnolia ‘Blush’

Left: Magnolia x soulangeana

TH

INK

ST

OC

K.C

OM

Page 42: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

4x Go Gardening Mag ads275x210mmS.indd 4 18/07/13 8:47 PM

Page 43: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

4x Go Gardening Mag ads275x210mmS.indd 4 18/07/13 8:47 PM

gogardening.co.nz 43

also relatively small trees, with an elegant low-branching framework smothered in white, pink or rosy purple tulip flowers. The Jurys of Taranaki are recognised internationally for their work with magnolias and have brought us a range of compact and very showy magnolias, such as ‘Apollo’, ‘Milky Way’ and ‘Vulcan’, deciduous trees which bloom at a young age.

One of today’s favourite evergreens, Michelia yunnanensis (aka Magnolia laevifolia) is especially stunning in September, when its masses of fuzzy brown buds release fragrant creamy-white flowers. This elegant shaped shrub (or small tree) has dark green leaves with russet brown velvet undersides. Michelia yunnanensis makes a beautiful hedge and grows well in sun or shade, although at least half-day sun is recommended for best flowering. The species cross-pollinates easily, which means we have a range of cultivars to choose from, all with cream flowers, but offering subtle differences in form and foliage.

NEW AGE MAGNOLIASRecently, botanists reclassified

the plant genus Michelia as Magnolia. For now, most nurseries are sticking with the name Michelia. Whatever you call them, these beautiful flowering evergreens are increasingly sought after for their mass of spring flowers, attractive foliage and extremely versatile form. They’re extensively used as small feature trees, as hedges, for topiary and in containers. The last few

years have seen the release of some excellent new varieties, including the ‘Fairy Magnolias’, bred in New Zealand at Jury’s nursery. Today’s choice includes ‘Fairy Blush’, ‘Fairy White’ and ‘Fairy Cream’. These extremely free flowering varieties offer quick but very compact growth, ideal for trimming and shaping as topiary or hedges.

RESPLENDENT RHODOS

Flamboyantly dressed in almost every imaginable colour, rhododendrons and azaleas are among spring’s most glittering shrubs. They hail from misty mountain habitats where the air is cool and moist, and their roots are frequently washed by rain trickling through rich porous soil. In New Zealand these needs are most famously met in Taranaki, Manawatu, and Otago. Despite their prevalence in big rambling parks and botanic gardens, they’re not just for large gardens. Compact rhododendrons (which include azaleas) are perfect for small gardens too.

The sub-tropical vireya rhododendrons thrive in our warmer humid regions. They make fantastic container plants with thick shiny leaves and waxy flowers. Having evolved near the equator where the daylight hours are constant, vireya rhododendrons can flower at any time of year.

RHODO TIPS , Plant in part shade.

,Improve drainage on heavier soils by planting in raised beds or on a slope.

,Keep roots cool and moist under a layer of organic mulch. Rhododendrons have fine roots that grow close to the soil surface and are very prone to drying out.

,Water regularly in the early years and during dry weather.

,Feed in spring with slow release fertiliser or blood and bone. Avoid lime.

tre

es

an

d s

hru

bs

Left: Fairy Magnolia ‘Cream’Below: A cool climate rhododendron Bottom: A sub-tropical Vireya rhododendron

BIG

ST

OC

K.C

OM

Page 44: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Latest in colour, texture and style proudly grown by Robinsons Nursery

www.kiwigoldnz.com

KIWI Gold

Acacia ‘Limelight’ Laurus ‘Pride of Providence’

Lomandra ‘Lime Wave’ Weigelia ‘Wine & Roses’

Cordyline ‘Chocomint’Helleborus ‘Ivory Prince’

Pseudopanax ‘Moa’s Toes’ Choisya ‘White Dazzler’

Page 45: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

gogardening.co.nz 45

DECIDUOUS DELIGHTSShrubs that sit stark and leafless

through winter are some of spring’s most spectacular. Although some will grow quite large, these old fashioned lovelies deserve to be planted more often and they are easily contained with a trim after flowering.

The deciduous viburnums have the X factor in early spring and are often supremely fragrant. Viburnum carlesii and similar Viburnum x burkwoodii are irresistibly fragrant early bloomers.

Later in spring the beloved snowball tree, Viburnum opulus ‘Sterile’ comes into bloom, a real show stopper with its showy balls of lime green to cream. The pink snowball tree, Viburnum plicatum ‘Roseace’ produces pink flushed snowballs and deeply veined dark green leaves with a bronze-purple tint. Viburnums like moist well-drained

soil. They need plenty of sun to flower well, but in a hot climate are best with part day shade.

Other deciduous gems include Stachyurus, Forsythia and vibrant orange and gold deciduous azaleas, which are also fragrant. For an early season spectacle on a smaller scale consider Weigela, Spiraea, or Deutzias. In a cool climate, many of these shrubs also have colourful autumn foliage.

tre

es

an

d s

hru

bs

For the bees– Viburnum

– Escallonia

– Pyracantha

– Lavender

– Hebe

– Chaenomeles (flowering quince)

– Camellias

Clockwise from top: Viburnum carlesii; snowball tree; pink snowball tree.

Page 46: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

AFRICAN QUEENSProteas and their close

cousins, the Leucospermums are some of spring’s most impressive shrubs with flowers that are prized for picking. They grow well in coastal gardens and on slopes. They need very free draining soils because their highly evolved roots are extremely efficient at absorbing water and nutrients. While relatively frost hardy once established, most members of the protea family need protection from frost when young. Regular pruning from a young age encourages a strong bushy structure, but take care as most do not recover if you prune back into wood without leaves.

KIWI SHOW OFFSSpring is show time for some of

our most colourful flowering natives. Kowhai (Sophora) make lovely trees for small gardens, especially if you want to attract native birds. If space is limited consider the very compact Sophora ‘Dragons’ Gold’. Beautiful kakabeak (Clianthus puniceus) drips with bright red, pink or white flowers in spring. Although it can be quite short lived, this endangered native shrub is well worth planting, both for its spring colour and the tui and bellbird it attracts. Its sprawling habit can be kept in check with pruning after flowering. For colourful flowering natives less than a metre tall, select from the huge range of hebes (be sure to choose a variety to suit your climate) or try a beautiful red rata (Metrosideros carminea).

For the vase– Protea– Leucadendron– Leucospermum– Banksia– Camellia– Magnolia

Left: KowhaiBelow left: Hebe ‘Heebie Jeebies’Below right: Leucospermum

For native birds– Kowhai

– Kakabeak

– NZ Flax

– Protea

– Banksia

– Callistemon (bottlebrush)

– Grevillea

46 go gardening spring

tree

s an

d sh

rub

s

Page 47: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

ENCOURAGING KIDS TO EAT MORE FRUIT, Don’t overwhelm them with over-sized portions. Most children will eat more fruit if it is small, or cut up for them.

, Keep a bowl of fruit on the kitchen table for easy snacks.

, Slice fresh fruits onto breakfast cereals or pancakes.

, Make your own fresh fruit ice-blocks as treats.

, Arrange colourful fruit on a ‘mini-platter’ for afternoon tea.

, Look for dwarf trees that produce fruit in easy reach.

, Let your child choose a fruit tree to plant in the garden.

gogardening.co.nz 47

BITE SIZEDWe know it’s good for them, but

getting children excited about fresh fruit can be trying. One

time-honoured approach is to think bite-sized

portions for pint-sized people. These colourful new mini fruits from Waimea Nurseries are child-

friendly, tasty and easy to grow - perfect

for a family garden.

CUTE NEW MINIATURE ‘THUMBELINA®’ APPLES

Grown especially for kids by Waimea Nurseries, the new ‘Thumbelina™’ range of apples are perfectly sized for small hands. Golden Crunch and Ruby Crunch are sweet, crisp and juicy with brightly coloured skins. They are a quarter of the size of regular apples. And the trees are grafted onto dwarfing rootstocks, so the fruit is easily reached.

The fruit is sweet and ready for eating when the tree has dropped its leaves in late autumn, leaving the fruit on the tree like bright decorations. In spring these highly decorative little trees put on a pretty display of pink and white blossom.

PROUDLY GROWN BY WAIMEA NURSERIES, NELSONLook for these plants at a Go Gardening Garden Centre near you. To locate stockists go to www.gogardening.co.nz

FLATTO PEACHES Kids can’t resist novelty, colour

and cuteness. The Flatto™ range is loved by kids and adults alike, being easy to eat and virtually unsquashable in the lunch box. What’s more, the stone is easily removed by pushing the center of the fruit. Flatto™ includes both peaches and nectarines, which ripen in mid to late February. All put on a spectacular display of spring blossom.

These varieties and many others grown by Waimea Nurseries are available from garden retailers nationwide. Waimea Nurseries is one of New Zealand’s leading fruit tree nurseries, with a large repertoire of new varieties sourced from around the world. For more information about these and many more fruit tree varieties go to www.waimeanurseries.co.nz

ad

vert

ori

al

Below: Thumbelina® Golden Crunch, Thumbelina® Ruby Crunch, Flatto™ Peach

TH

INK

ST

OC

K.C

OM

Page 48: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

48 go gardening spring

ad

verto

rial

A ROSE OF OUR TIMETwo decades after the original Flower Carpet ‘Pink’ started a rose revolution, the world is still in love with Flower Carpet roses. Global sales now exceed 75 million plants.

Flower Carpet ‘Amber’ Flower Carpet ‘White’ NEW Flower Carpet ‘Pink Splash’

Page 49: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

ATP-

987-

13

Available this SPRING at all leading Garden Centres

New releaseNew release

This spring sees the New Zealand release

of the ninth Flower Carpet Rose variety.

Also this spring, the two millionth

Flower Carpet Rose will be sold in New

Zealand - a good time to reflect on the history of a

phenomenally successful line of roses.

The Flower Carpet story starts back in the

eighties when Australian nurseryman, Anthony

Tesselaar was introduced to German rose breeder

Werner Noak. Many years earlier, the insightful

rose breeder had sensed that easy care, disease

resistant plants were the way of the future. His

work produced that first hot pink rose and laid the

foundation for all the other Flower Carpet varieties

that followed.

It was Anthony Tesselaar who took the Flower

Carpet Rose to the world. “When we saw it, we

knew enough to understand it would be a great

rose. What we never anticipated was the tens of

millions of roses that would be sold,” says Anthony.

Looking back, he attributes that huge success

to a great rose coinciding with perfect timing.

“I remember the era before Flower Carpet Roses,

when gardeners were focused on the bloom but

not so concerned if the plant itself was a beast

to grow. They were used to this and they had the

time and knowledge to deal with the necessary

pruning and spraying of traditional roses. But

the next generation had little time for romantic,

high-maintenance plants, so when the first Flower

Carpet Rose arrived on the scene – a rose that

declared itself to be easy care – people absolutely

embraced it.”

Flower Carpet Roses more than lived up

to their claims: They grew like rockets, covered

themselves in gorgeous flowers and they didn’t

need to be sprayed. They could be crudely hacked

back with the hedge trimmers to fill out again

beautifully in spring and thrived surprisingly harsh

conditions.

And as a result, gardeners have kept coming

back for more.

BRAND NEW FOR SPRING!! Eagerly awaited Flower Carpet® ‘Pink Splash’

arrives in garden centres this October. Like all

Flower Carpet Roses, this spectacular bi-colour is a

low maintenance, disease resistant and very long

flowering shrub with dense glossy foliage.

Versatile Flower Carpet Roses are ideal for

mass planting, or as colour accents in garden

borders or pots.

Find out more at www.tesselaar.com

Page 50: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

NOTICE BOARDFood, fashion and fun at the Powerco Taranaki Garden Spectacular

Flowers aren’t the only colourful things planned for this year’s Powerco Taranaki Garden Spectacular. Visitors can also enjoy comedians, spring fashion, and celebrity chefs.

For serious gardeners, there’ll be guest speakers on numerous topics from alternative gardening systems to floral design, and guided walks through some of the 46 premier gardens.

For the not so serious gardeners, TV gardening comedian Te Radar will speak on the humorous side of giving up city comforts for the country life. Art is also on the agenda with Govett Brewster Art Gallery’s artist-in-residence, Reuben Paterson, hosting “High Tea” at Boxwood Garden.

“We’re aiming to appeal to a broader cross-section of the community,” says festival manager, Lisa Ekdahl. “Gardens are places we like to play, enjoy food and good company – as well as superb garden environments.”November 1-10, 2013. Find out more at www.gardenfestnz.co.nz

New Zealand Masterchef 2010 winner, Brett McGregor will be sharing his passion for food at the Powerco Taranaki Garden Spectacular.

50 go gardening spring

Spring is here! Daffodils and freesias are welcomed for their end of winter cheer. But you might also find some undesirable bulbs poking their heads above the ground: Montbretia (Crocosmia x crocosmiiflora) sends up stalks of pretty bright orange flowers in summer and reproduces itself both by corm division and (less frequently) by seed. Other baddies include stinking iris (Iris foetidissima), yellow flag iris (Iris pseudacorus) and Aristea ecklonii. Common Agapanthus praecox is one of the most concerning bulbous weeds in northern regions.

The best way to stop weedy bulbs spreading is to ensure that the plants don’t set seed. Also, take care when disposing of bulbs, corms, and rhizomes that can grow into new plants. Find more about these weeds and others at www.weedbusters.org.nz

GOOD BULBS, BAD BULBS!

WEEDBUSTERS

A world of roses comes to Palmerston North

This year Palmerston North will host The World Federation Rose Convention, at Arena 2 in Pascal Street. The show will open to the public from 1 to 5pm on Saturday 23rd and 9.30am – 4pm on Sunday 24th November. Visitors will be treated to displays by New Zealand and international exhibitors, including a display of old fashioned roses by Heritage Roses New Zealand (Inc). There will also be displays of floral art, quilting and rose stamps.

November 23-24, 2013. Find out more at www.nzroses.org.nz

3

Page 51: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Spring Diary

1-10 November 2013

CORE FUNDERS

EVENT PARTNER

MEDIA SPONSORSGRANTS

SPONSORS

For a free programme call 0800 746 363 or visit

www.gardenfestnz.co.nz

Sept, Oct, Nov Dunedin Botanic Garden’s 150th anniversary. www.dunedin.govt.nz

Sept 14-15 North Island National Daffodil Show, Gisborne Showgrounds. Find out more on page 54. www.daffodil.org.nz

Sept 15 Bee beginnings, Tupare gardens, New Plymouth. www.tupare.info

Sept 28-29 South Island National Daffodil Show, Nelson. Find out more on page 54. www.daffodil.org.nz

29 Sept - 6 Oct Spring Festival at Wellington Botanic Gardens. www.wellington.govt.nz

Oct 25-26 NZ Edible Garden Show Hastings Show Grounds. www.nzediblegarden.co.nz

Nov 1-10 Powerco Taranaki Garden Spectacular. www.gardenfestnz.co.nz

Nov 7-10 Nelmac Garden Marlborough. www.gardenmarlborough.co.nz

Nov 8-11 NZ Iris Society Convention Timaru. www.nziris.org.nz

Nov 9-10 The Gisborne Garden & Arts Festival. www.gisbornefestival.co.nz

Nov 9-10 Jassy Dean Garden Safari, Waiheke Island. www.jassydeantrust.co.nz

Nov 9-10 Palmers Planet Mangawhai Garden Ramble. www.mangawhai.co.nz

Nov 11-17 Nelson Growables Garden Week. www.itson.co.nz

Nov 16-17 Auckland Garden DesignFest. www.gardendesignfest.co.nz

Nov 16-17 Coromandel gardens, arts and crafts. Ph 078668563 email: [email protected]

Nov 23-24 The World Federation Rose Convention Palmerston North. [email protected] www.nzroses.org.nz

Nov 28-Dec 1 Timaru Festival of Roses. www.festivalofroses.co.nz

Nov 30 Great Barrier Island Spectacular by Nature Garden Tour. www.thebarrier.co.nz

Gardens to visit: www.gardens.org.nz , www.gardenstovisit.co.nz

Is your school garden New Zealand’s best?The Tui School Garden Challenge is an annual competition to find the best school garden in New Zealand. We want to see schools growing and learning then sharing the results with their communities. The last date for entry is October 29. Find out more on page 33 or go to www.tuigarden.co.nz

Page 52: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

com

pe

tition

s

GIVEAWAYSWIN DALTONS ORGANIC BIO-FUNGICIDE This 100% organic, non-toxic, Bio-gro certified product range is a breakthrough in the fight against diseases such as damping-off and root rot. It protects seeds and plants the natural way, by strengthening the plant’s immune system. Daltons Organic Bio-Fungicide Powder comes in two formulas; a wettable powder for initial planting, and a granular form for ongoing protection. Find out more at www.daltons.co.nz.

We have five prize packs, valued at $50 each to give away. Each pack contains one Daltons Organic Bio-Fungicide Powder and one Daltons Organic Bio-Fungicide Granules. See entry details on following page.

WIN PHOSTROGEN PLANT FOOD Phostrogen All Purpose Plant Food in the 800g box with 50% extra makes 120 watering cans of plant food for the price of 80! This time proven multi-purpose plant food is ideal for flowers and veges in the garden or in containers.

We have six 800g packs valued at $22.95 each to give away. See entry details on following page.

52 go gardening spring

Share the love of gardening on Facebook

Simply go to www.facebook.com/gogardeningnz and click on

FacebookCompetitions coming soon…

52 go gardening spring

WIN ZEALANDIA’S LATEST PETUNIASThis season’s spectacular new petunias from Zealandia are early and continuous flowering in breakthrough colours. Petunia ‘Twilight’ and ‘Blue a Fuse’ will add instant brilliance to outdoor containers, and are covered in bloom all summer long. Read more on page 6.

We have three boxes of Zealandia petunias to give away, valued at $100 per box. Each box contains ten plants. See entry details on following page.

Page 53: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Be in to WIN

Simply fill in the entry form below and drop it into the entry box next time you shop at a Go Gardening retailer. The lucky winner receives a Go Gardening Gift Card to the value of $250, and five runners up receive cards worth $50 each.

Visit www.gogardening.co.nz/retailers to find your nearest retailer.

Enter now! The last day for entry is Sunday 20th October 2013.

$500 PRIZE-POOL OF GO GARDENING GIFT CARDS

For terms and conditions go to www.gogardening.co.nz

Title: First Name: Family Name:

Address:

Phone: Mobile: Email address:

Name the Garden Centre where you received your copy of Go Gardening:

Please tick here if you do not wish to receive any further correspondence.

gogardening.co.nz 53

WIN NEW YATES GARDEN GUIDEYates celebrates 130 years in New Zealand with the latest edition of Yates Garden Guide, New Zealand’s most comprehensive, reliable and practical gardening book, with over one million copies sold.

This special anniversary edition features a pictorial history of Yates and a new chapter about changes in garden design over the last century, to inspire heritage traditions in the modern garden, as well as a completely revised chapter on New Zealand native plants.

Fully illustrated, this book contains everything you need to know about growing trees, shrubs, vines, flowers, vegetables, herbs and fruit.

We have four copies of the 78th Yates Garden Guide, valued at $50 to give away. See right for entry details.

HOW TO ENTERChoose one of three ways to be in to win any of the prizes on these pages:1. ENTER ONLINE at www.gogardening.co.nz OR2. EMAIL [email protected] with the name of the product you wish to win in the subject line.

Please include your name, city, phone number and email address, OR 3. ENTRY BOX: write which prize you wish to win, followed by your name, physical address,

telephone number and email address on the back of an envelope and drop it in a Go Gardening Entry Box at your nearest Go Gardening retailer.

ENTRIES CLOSE on Sunday October 20, 2013 and must be received by NGINZ not later than Thursday October 24, 2013.

WIN JOSEPH BENTLEY TOOLSMade from high quality polished stainless steel with solid oak handles, Joseph Bentley tools have the look and feel of the good old days. The range includes trowels, spades, secateurs, forks, snips and more. All carry a lifetime guarantee.

We have one Joseph Bentley Grow and Gather pack valued at $55 to give away. The pack contains a hand fork and trowel plus a Joseph Bentley trug as featured on page 5. See entry details below.

WIN TUI LAWN CARE PACKSpring is a great time to sow a new lawn or revamp tired turf. Tui Superstrike Lawn Seed is specially treated for speedy germination within seven days.

We have five lawn care packs valued at $41 each to give away. Each pack contains one 750g pack of Tui Superstrike Lawnseed, plus one 3kg pack of Tui Lawn Fertiliser. See below for entry details.

Page 54: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

Available at all leading garden retailers

The world’s only black petunia

Freephone 0800 946 837 www.wintergardenz.co.nz

Pricing from $995

Unique features of a Winter Gardenz Greenhouse...3 Two superior glazing options available:

• 6mm Twin wall polycarbonate - insulating • 4mm Toughened safety glass - strong & safe

3 Strong and durable powder coated aluminium joinery construction

3 Sturdy Aluminium base included with foundation mounting options available

3 Large range of sizes to suit your needs3 Full range of accessories & shelving3 Built to last! Don’t be fooled by cheap &

nasty imported copies which don’t last!

Glass & Polycarbonate

Greenhouses & Accessories

Quality NZ made Greenhouses

BUilt For NeW ZealaNd’s HarsH CoNditioNs

PARVA plants

FREE Spring Catalogue

Full Colour Bulbs, Perennials,

Shrubs & New Releases

NZ’s leading mail-order

plant Catalogue

Stockists of Living Fashion Plants

w w w. p a r v a p l a n t s . c o . n zEmail: [email protected] Ph: 03 349 4918

The World’s Plants to Your Door

Primula Cobalt Blue

1st -10th November 2013

60

CLIPPINGS

54 go gardening spring

Read itONLINE!

Now you can read Go Gardening online on your iPad, tablet or computer. All you need to do is subscribe to the magazine and specify your favourite member garden centre.

We will email you a link to the online version for you to read and enjoy.

Go to www.ggm.co.nz/subscribe.htm to subscribe NOW

Page 55: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

subscribe now!

POST WITH CHEQUE TO PO BOX 3443 WELLINGTON OR SUBSCRIBE ON-LINE www.gogardening.co.nz/subscribe

gogardening.co.nz 55

For just $4.95 per issue receive our full suite of publications plus a FREE packet of

Yates seed with every issue! Four seasonal issues for just $19.80 per year.

Family Subscription OfferKeep the whole family happy and fully inspired to Go Gardening with this fantastic family subscription offer.

$4.95per issue (min. 4 issues)

Go Gardening Magazine delivered free to your home, for the family to enjoy. No more risk of missing out!

WINTER 2013

KIdsyour own fruit

GROW

surprising beetroot treats

CREATE

the magic of spring bulbs

DISCOVER

LOOK IN

SIDE

FOR LO

TS OF FUN

PUZZLES

TO DO!

beat the

Chill!

ONLINE VERSION AVAILABLE TO SUBSCRIBERS! Read Go Gardening anywhere at any time! Subscribers have access to the online version to read on your iPad, tablet or computer.

Kids Go Gardening Magazine for your children or grandchildren with lots of activities and ideas to try to ‘get them interested in gardening and the outdoors’. Alternatively you could pass them on to your extended family or your local schools.

Top value at a mere $4.95 for ‘the works’

Plus free Yates Seed with every issue.

Cardholder name ___________________________________________________________________Expiry ____/____

Signature _______________________________________________________________________________________________________

Send to

Name:

Street Address/PO Box

Suburb City Postcode

Phone: Mobile:

Email:

Charge my Visa Mastercard Amex

OR Enclosed a cheque for $19.80 Make Cheques Payable to Nurserymen’s Enterprises Ltd

DON’T MISS OUT! Get your family subscription posted and emailed to you for just $19.80 incl p&p.Commencing: Spring Summer Autumn Winter Next available issue

PAYMENT OPTIONS

Bill to (if different from the recipient’s address)

Name:

Street Address/PO Box

Suburb City Postcode

Phone: Mobile:

Email:

OUR KIDS GO GARDENING MINI MAGAZINE with your own go gardening magazine copyplus FREE Yates seed posted to your child 4x per year.

FOR KIDS!

YES we do have a little gardener or two in our family!

I am the child’s Parent Grandparent Teacher/other

Get children interested in gardening!

Page 56: Go Gardening Spring 2013 Garden Depot

advice, guides and news

sharing the love of gardening

visit member stores

expert advice & great deals

give the gift that keeps giving