Greenshutters Garden Centre Newsletter March 2025
Spring has well and truly sprung over the last few days with welcome sunshine brightening up our gardens and making it pleasant to be outdoors again.
We have lots of new plants in stock including our first batch of herbaceous perennials. including Hollyhocks, Lupins, Achillea, Nepeta and much more.
Now is the time to plant seed potatoes, we still have a range of early or main crop varieties available as well as onion, shallot and garlic sets.
There is still time to plant Dahlia and other corms/bulbs that will flower in the summer in pots or garden beds, we still have a good range of different varieties – please see our special offer for March of Buy One, Get One Free on a pack of bulbs.
Mother’s Day is Sunday 30th March, please pop in if you are looking for inspiration for a gift.
Here’s hoping the sunshine continues for a while. We hope to see you soon.
Roger and all the team at Greenshutters Garden Centre.

Daphne ‘Perfume Princess’
Reasons for planting Mixed Native Hedging
For most of us, hedges play an important role in providing us with privacy from neighbours or screening off something we don’t want to see. They also filter out pollution from roads and provide nesting sites and food for birds, insects and other animals.

Mixed Native Hedge
In addition to popular evergreen hedges such as Laurel, Griselinia, Western Red Cedar and Leylandii, there is an alternative that we call “Mixed Native Hedges” that are becoming more popular. The main difference is that unlike evergreen hedges which usually consist of just one type of plant, a native hedge can easily consist of three or more types of plants, all growing next to each other in the same hedgerow. There is a very wide range of these native plants such as Hawthorn (Maythorn), Field Maple, Hazel, Blackthorn, Wild Crab Apple, Guelder Rose, Dog Rose and Spindle as well as species that are sometimes grown in a mix but more often on their own, such as Beech, Hornbeam and Privet. You can pick and choose exactly what combinations you prefer. All these plants are deciduous, meaning they drop their leaves in winter, but when they are in leaf in the spring, summer and autumn, they offer a myriad of different flower colours, leaf textures, autumn colours, berries and fruits with each species showing off its attributes at different times of the year.

Hawthorn flowers in spring
Mixed native hedges offer many benefits. They support diverse wildlife and biodiversity, they provide a mixture of colours and the hedge that changes throughout the year. If you are concerned about security, mature spiny Hawthorns or Blackthorns will deter larger animals or intruders. If you like to make homegrown produce like sloe gin or Crab Apple jelly, Mixed Native Hedging makes it possible.

Sloes from Blackthorn
For example, let’s choose Hawthorn, Blackthorn, Hazel, Wild Crab Apple, Spindle and Privet as a mix for your new native hedge:
Each of these will flower in turn, starting with Hazel catkins in February, the white flowers of Blackthorn in February/March, white Hawthorn flowers with a pink centre in April/May, pink-white Wild Crab Apple flowers in May, pink/orange Spindle flowers in May/June and white Privet flowers around July. This long season of flowering makes them very attractive to pollinating insects.
Later in autumn the Blackthorns grow their fruit (sloes), the Hawthorns will be covered in bright red berries (haws), the Wild Crab Apple have their luminous yellowish-red fruit. Hazel will have hazel nuts and bright yellow autumn leaves and Spindle leaves turn an incredible bright crimson and have bright orange berries in clusters. This end of the season provides winter food for birds and other animals.

Spindle Berries
There is still enough time this spring to plant a mixed native hedge from “bare-root whips”. These are plants that have been grown in a field for a couple of years, dug up and had the soil washed off the roots. They are ready to plant and are usually 60-80cm tall. You can plant them in the winter and early spring. Bare-root season lasts until the end of March or early April (weather dependent) and is the most economical way of creating a mixed native hedge. If you miss the planting window or want a more immediate hedge, we have our instant native hedging grown in troughs in various sizes that can be planted at any time of year.
Bare-root plants tend to be planted at 5 per metre in a staggered row. Please ask for information sheet on how to plant a mixed native hedge or ask a member of our team for advice and prices.

Blackthorn Flowers in the evening sun
If you prefer screening all year round and a solid green hedge even in winter, then choose Laurel, Griselinia, Portugal Laurel, Leylandii or Western Red Cedar (Thuja plicata). See our online hedging store at EvergreenHedging.com
Looking good at Greenshutters
Here is a selection of plants looking good in February:

Polyanthus Stella ‘Scarlet Pimpernel’

Polyanthus Stella ‘Pink Champagne’

Periwinkle – Vinca minor ‘Bowles Variety’

Pulmonaria ‘Blue Ensign’

Dwarf Pine – Pinus ‘Carsten’s Wintergold’

Primula dendiculata Lilac

Camellia ‘Debutante

Camellia ‘Silver Anniversary’

Polyanthus ‘Gold Lace’

Heather – Erica ‘Kramer’s Red’
Special Offers for Garden Club Members Only

Rose bonica
March 2025 Offer 1: £3 OFF Any single rose plant!

Dahlia Night Butterfly
March 2025 Offer 2: Buy One Get One Free Any pack of summer flowering bulbs!

