These pretty Miniature Roses, once established, will offer you an abundance of small blooms with a hardy cascading habit. These fabulous performers are perfect for all your patio pots, window boxes, baskets and garden borders.
Hybrid Tea Rose Queen Elizabeth will bring a mass of delicate pink blooms and an exotic fragrance to your garden. It really is a very attractive and regal Rose which will look wonderful planted under a window or near a door, where you can enjoy its delightful fragrance.
An exquisite Rose which will provide unbeatable colour and fragrance throughout the season. This lovely Rose will make an excellent addition to your garden borders, patio pots or indeed anywhere you can enjoy their heady perfume.
It will produce a profusion of massive, violet flowers which are highly scented. These plants make a create stand-alone feature plant, but also look striking as part of your mixed border schemes.
Hybrid Tea Rose Double Delight, producing large fragrant bi-coloured flower heads in creamy white edged with cherry red. Plant them close to a path, patio or border where you can enjoy the scent. Supplied as bare root pruned back and ready to be planted.
FREE DELIVERYThis vibrant bouquet of beautiful bright yellow roses with azure blue fragranced iris makes an eye-catching arrangement. Delivered ready to arrange, this bouquet is ideal for those who want to create their own floral arrangement.Please note the vase is not included.
Guaranteed to bring both colour & a smile to their day! Featuring a beautiful yellow rose plant displayed in a two tone ceramic that can be used time and time again. FREE Lindor Mini Milk Chocolates, use code FREECHOCS FREE Delivery Perfect to bring life in to a home Delivered in bud to guarantee freshness Blooms will fully open within a few days Featuring a yellow rose in a pink two tone ceramic Product Dimensions:- Height 32cm (plant only 10. 5cm) Width 18cm
Perfect to drink all year round, deceptively light and airy for summer garden parties, with plush fruits and some creamy spicy notes to pair up to robust cold weather fare. This is terrific with poached salmon and mayonnaise, but equally successful with a fruit pudding or even cold chicken salad or simple pork chops.You must be over 18 to buy this product. By adding this product to your basket you are confirming that you and the recipient of the product are over 18
A dry, refreshing all-purpose aperitivo and pleasant accompaniment to light lunches, this Prosecco was voted The Independents Best Buy 2016. Enjoy with canapés, Lobster linguine, seafood or Dim Sum.You must be over 18 to buy this product. By adding this product to your basket you are confirming that you and the recipient of the product are over 18
Star Magnolias are compact and slow growing, making them ideal for smaller borders and containers. Magnolia stellata 'Rosea' is a pretty cultivar that will certainly make an impact in spring. Soft pink blooms erupt from furry buds that adorn the bare branches. As the flowers age they fade to white with a delicate pink blush. This charming deciduous shrub becomes cloaked in handsome green foliage as the flowers fade and colourful cone-like fruit take their place. A particularly elegant choice for sheltered borders, patio containers and woodland gardens.
Rosemary is a versatile herb, providing evergreen interest all year round, fragrant leaves for use in cooking, and nectar-rich flowers for bees in spring. Grow rosemary along a path, either in a well-draining pot or plant-ed in the soil once it matures, so every time you brush past, the leaves release their aromatic oils. Overall, rosemary requires little maintenance during the year except cutting back after flowering to prevent plants becoming straggly and woody. Save the trimmings to propagate new plants or dry them for cooking. Light and Water Rosemary grows best in a sunny, sheltered spot in well-drained soil. It can struggle in heavy clay soils, par-ticularly in winter, when the ground tends to be wetter. Although frost resistance, the combination of the cold and waterlogged soil can kill immature rosemary plants. We suggest you move them inside during the winter. As they prefer to be on the drier side a terracotta pot will suit it well as they allow the soil to dry out faster. We also suggest you grow rosemary in well-drained soil in full sun. Young plants can suffer if their roots are sitting in wet soil in winter, so it’s a good idea to grow rosemary in a container for a couple of years before planting into the garden. Cut back annually (after blooming) to prevent the plant from becoming too woody. These cutting can then be dried out for cooking or propagated. Water when the soil is dry to the touch, water thoroughly and allow it to drain and dry completely before wa-tering again.