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16 October 2014
Gardener's Corner

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Autumn 2001
Offshoots

Garden Centres and The Precautionary Tale of Impulse Buying
By Kim Lenaghan

There was a time when I could most easily be seduced into spending vast amounts of money on numerous products I didn聮t need and would never use by the scents and smells of department store cosmetics counters. Now my secret shopping vice is garden centres. The second I drive into the carpark my hands sweat, my heart pounds and my plastic cards are practically sprinting out of my wallet toward the till. It聮s like the cry of a manic City trader "buy, buy, buy" as I load up my trolley with hellebores, potentillas, bougainvillea and clematis with exotic sounding names like 聭Perle d聮Azur聮 or 聭Etoille Violette聮. 聭Chanel No. 5聮 and 聭Elizabeth Arden聮 just can聮t compare

A Garden CentreMost garden centres are now so attractively and thoughtfully laid out that it聮s a joy to walk around them. All those healthy, beautifully tended plants, that riot of colour, it just sends me and, judging by the queues at the checkouts, everybody else into a complete buying frenzy. The problem is that you don聮t always stop to think what exactly you聮re bringing home. I聮ve bought trees that will grow and spread like Jack聮s Beanstalk for a tiny urban garden, I聮ve bought plants that love the sun for tubs on a shady patio, I聮ve bought acid loving shrubs to plant in a garden that has an alkaline soil - all because I got carried away by the wonder of it all and threw caution, advice and common sense to the wind.

So try and overcome that urge to buy everything before you by deciding in advance what kind of garden you currently have and what sort of look or plan you want to achieve. If you want a cottage garden then stick to buying plants like climbing roses, delphiniums, poppies, foxgloves, honeysuckles, whatever. No matter how attractive the clipped box and the succulent yuccas look in the garden centre they definitely don聮t say cottage garden.

Determine what kind of soil you have, where the shade and sunshine are and don聮t buy plants that are inappropriate for the conditions just because you like the look of them. They may well survive but they聮ll never thrive. When the label says 聭full sunshine聮 it really does mean full sunshine. As for containers, some things just have to be planted in the ground, however much you wish it otherwise. So don聮t take some poor, unsuspecting plant and try to adapt it to the wrong conditions, just find a better alternative for your particular situation.

Think of gardening as being like fashion - if you聮ve legs are like tree trunks you wouldn聮t wear a mini skirt so why would you be daft enough to plant a Fremontodendron 聭California Glory聮 on an exposed north facing wall that never gets any significant sunshine. Well, I wouldn聮t wear the mini but I did kill the Fremontodendron and that聮s why I聮m sharing this cautionary tale and hopefully learning from my mistakes.

I聮m not saying that I should or could stop going to garden centres - I聮d need to go into rehab for that - I聮m merely reminding myself, and anyone else who might suffer from a similar tendency, that impulse buying is as expensive and fruitless in a garden centre as it is at the make up counter in Boots.

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