Tropical plants like mango trees and citrus can be successfully grown in the UK with proper care, including maintaining temperatures above 15°C, providing winter protection in conservatories or sunny windowsills, using ericaceous compost, and gradually acclimatizing them to outdoor conditions during summer months.
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A Summer Garden with YGTV
Added:Hello.
>> Good afternoon.
>> Welcome to the potting shed. It is myself, Beex Edwards, and of course, the award-winning gardener, Adam Walcott.
And we are here with you garden in the fabulous spotting shed to bring you a brand new week of deals and some really exciting plants today.
>> Yeah, we have. There's one behind that I'm really really excited about. Look at that. It's a mango tree.
>> It's a mango tree, everybody.
>> It is.
>> It's quite exciting. Well, we'll get to that one for you in a little while.
Let's give you all of the other information that you need. First of all, you will have seen a code that has just appeared on screen. Is that the correct code, Matthew?
>> I didn't think it was. Uh, the code should be YGTV2526.
We're going to change that right now for you. We are in a brand new week. That means we're half nearly halfway through the year.
>> Oh, don't talk about that.
>> We're nearly halfway through the year.
Isn't it the summer solstice this week?
>> No, no, no, no, no, no.
>> Do not mention those. Don't mention those words in my ear. It's It's not happening this year. It's canled. The days are staying this long until the end of November this year. It's official.
>> Let's move over. move past that subject.
Okay, the code is now right. It is on the screen YGTV2526.
It's very important that you know that code because right here, look at that.
That is free postage. That will get accessed when you enter the code when you place your order. And you will also you will also save money. Any deals we've got on the plants, buy one get one free, double up deals, all of those sorts of things, they are unlocked by entering that code.
>> They are indeed.
>> What else do you want to tell them?
>> Let's talk about the club. joining the club cuz then you can save loads and loads. 15% you can save on things like compost and all our plants, for example.
7 12% you can save on things like lawnmowers and garden furniture. And all it's going to cost you is £10 a year if you set it on that auto renewal as well, which is absolutely fabulous. And it doesn't even end there as well because we're going to give you four I said coupons, but same thing, vouchers, £5 vouchers you can use. Just look at the expiry dates on those. You can use them on separate orders. You don't have to use them every season. Four as successive orders. You can use them on providing they're not run out. And then also you've got the PMP vouchers there as well that you can use. $6.99 each. So you can save on PMP because everything in the potty shed today is shipping free, but if you go on the website and buy something, you might have shipping, but if you got those little vouchers, you can cancel it with one of them.
>> Yeah, that's brilliant. Um, right. What else do we need to sign? Oh, send us your pictures, please. I've seen that there is a few that have come into the email address so far. The email address you need is [email protected].
Matt is going to put it on the bottom of the screen. It's not apparently it's not coming up. It'll come up in a minute. Uh on the bottom of the screen, uh hopefully in a second it will say [email protected].
Please send us your pictures. Our gardens are looking fantastic now, aren't they? Or certainly areas of them are. Um and we would love to see what's happening in your garden as well, please.
>> I've still got a few gaps. I've still got a bit of soil showing.
>> I have. Of course you Oh, I'm working on that. That by cuz I've got Sunday off.
Sunday is the final blitzing of the last bit of bare soil day.
>> Is it?
>> Yeah.
>> You're going to sort it >> from next week. I do not want to see one square millimeter of bare earth in my garden.
>> All right, we are going to get started though. If you want to send us any comments, please do on YouTube or on Facebook. Hello to all the Facebookers.
Hello to the YouTubers. So, Vera, an Marissia Nathan from East Coast Tropical 1874 Villain Dingo is in as well. Mahi Creations, Baldrick, uh, did I say 1874 Villain and Skyler are the ones that I saw in the chat at the moment. All saying hello to everybody. Please, can we have a double up on compost Baldick? I don't know what the deal is this week. We'll certainly have a little look. Anyway, if you've got any questions or comments, stick them in the chat or send them via the email address which has now popped up on the bottom of the screen. Let's get cracking. We've got loads of double-up deals today, so we will be able to share those details with you. We're starting off with the fantastic hannabe. This is the digitalis. This is a nice compact one, isn't it?
>> Yeah. This is beautiful, Beex. This is a fox glove. And there's three fantastic colors here. You've got the pink, you've got the purple, and you've got the white.
>> Nice.
>> I adore fox gloves. They just bring real elegance to the garden, don't they?
>> Country cottage.
>> Yay, they do. And I mean, they're a wild plant, as you know. I mean, they grow in the woodlands. Goodness me, I went looking at the fox gloves growing where I live the other day. I saw your little video. That's amazing.
>> Oh, wow. They they are so so stunning.
They seed about. They're good for um sort of shady areas as well, all part sun, beds and borders, pots and containers. These ones are only going to get to about 50 to 75 cm tall. So, they're really super compact.
>> But these ones give you multiple flower spikes.
>> Well, that's what I was just looking at cuz the ones in the, you know, in the woods when you go and see the ones that grow wild, they tend to have just one central flower spike and perhaps the odd few. But look at these. I mean, these are multi- stemmed all the way round.
So, they're going to keep flowering for a long, long time. And they are what we call like a perennial plant. Now they won't live for years and years and years, but we call a shortlived perennial. But what they do is once the main flower spike has gone, they produce little pups at the base. And then they will be your flowering plants for next year and the year after. Weeks and weeks of flowers on these as well. And you'll have loads of bees bums in these all buzzing about. The bees go bees go bonkers for them. They love getting in.
They love getting all that nectar.
Obviously, they get the pollen as well.
And if you leave some of the flower heads on to the actual seed heads go really dark and and crispy, they will seed about and you'll get myriads of little fox glove seedlings that you can lift you I mean you can actually transplant them directly from where they are. You can pick them up and grow them in little pots. Basically once you've got fox gloves and they're in that happy place you one way or other you'll have them for always >> and they're quite like a part shade position. They're good for shade. So if you've got a north facing border, they they work really well with things like hostas, aces, all those sort of shade loving plants. They do very very well, but they will grow in a sunnier spot providing you give them a moisture retentive soil. They don't like dry soil. If you put them really dry soils, they tend to be a bit stunted and they don't give their best. But moisture retentive, organic rich soil, and they just bring such joy, such elegance, and they're sort of the plants are in kids fairy tale books, aren't there? There's a lot of kind of things about fox gloves. Weird name fox gloves. I've never seen a fox wearing gloves, but >> um yeah, I don't think they need to really, do they? But >> obviously, somebody might know why they're called fox gloves, but there you go.
>> If you know why they're called fox gloves, let us know in the chat, will you please? Now, we do have a double up deal available here as well. So, if you want to go for six of these, cuz bear in mind, it's it's a pack of three. So, you will get the purple, the pink, the white, and you can double up. So, two lots equals six of these plants all in the I want to say if they're a two or a three liter pot. three liter pots. So you would get six of those in the double up deal. Now it's double up for £10 more. Bearing in mind you're going to get three three plants each in a 3 liter pot for £10. Or if you're in the club because you still get your 15% discount that is £850 for three 3 liter potted plants. That's less than three quid each, which is just a crazy price.
561431 is the price. Uh sorry, no it's not. It's the item number that you need for this particular item. Now, if you are placing your orders on the phone lines, that item number is really useful. If you're placing your order on the website, yes, that item number is useful because you can type it into the search bar or you can simply go to the live now button and you can scroll down and that's where absolutely everything is. All of the items that we have selected for this week's show that have the free postage, you will be able to find in that one page. It's live now.
This is on a PC. If you're on a phone or a tablet, it might be under the menu, but scroll down. Also, if you're on a phone or a tablet, please scroll left and right through the pictures, not just up and down. That's how you'll be able to see absolutely everything. I love that huker inter eternal flame. We have got uh the budlier little rock stars that's coming up in a little while.
We've got that amazing patio mango tree that's coming up in a little while as well. Grow your own mangoes. Are you kidding?
>> Yeah, you can. It's a It's a project, but you can do it.
>> It's definitely possible. Definitely.
>> So, we're quite excited about having that one in the potting shed as well.
Oh, and Matt took that picture. There you go. That is exactly what the stock is looking like. He's just hold us in.
>> I remember standing right near him when he was taking that picture. I do. Yeah.
>> Yeah. There you go.
>> All right. So, loads of double up deals to be had as well. And we've started off with that digitalis on the double up deal. That is a bonkers deal. Six of those for $29.97 and less than that if you're in the club. Right, we're moving on. We're going to go back to one of the favorites from last year and this is an absolute stunner. This is called the Salvia Amistad. And these flowers are I'm going to say they are so impressive.
>> They are and they're impressive right the way up until late September, October, even into November. I visited a garden in Scotland quite late last year and they had a whole bed of all different salvas and these were about 3 m tall in that flower bed and they were huge and they just had hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of these really deep stunning purple flowers. It's another one that's really adored by the pollinators. You have that sort of fragrant foliage. I love >> I love the fragrant foliage.
>> I love the smell as well cuz that's that's really >> all salvas have this wonderful fragrance. That is that is gorgeous. But it's the amount of flour you get on this and it's a nice sort of perennial as well because it starts to flower from midsummer and then it will go all the way through. So when you've got things like das, chrysanthemums, gladioli, all those late autumn flowering plants, that's when it'll give you that color right the way through till autumn, bring in loads of bees and pollinators as well. And if you grow it in the right place, it will come back year after year. It wants a well drained position, reasonably sunny, or it will grow in sort of part shade as well.
>> If you put it in very wet, heavy soil, the roots tend to rot off, but in that prime spot, it will grow back year after year. What I tend to do with our one is I just sort of reduce it by about a half or two/irds at the end of autumn. Then I leave kind of the main stem there till the spring and then what you normally see is little shoots coming up from the base. Once you see the new shoots coming through, then you can take the final bit of stem off. It will do a lot of growing in the first half of the summer. You might think to yourself, are you ever going to flower? And then all of a sudden it starts to produce these buds and then at the end of the season you're going to think, are you ever going to stop flowering? Yeah, it keeps going quite late on as well. It's it's a great one for late season color and as Adam said, amazing for pollinators. They love it.
>> They do. I mean, there'll be the bees, the butterflies, the lace wings, the hoverflies, they'll be buzzing over this. And soon as the main flower spike has gone over, trim that main flower spike off. Then you get little side shoots to come out and they'll give you even more flowers. You can grow it in a pot or a container if you want to. But seriously, I mean, considering double up on this because two of these either side of a front door, a back door, um a flight of steps going up into the top part of your garden, all that kind of stuff will look absolutely awesome.
>> Look at that. I mean, that is absolutely achievable. Very, very easily. Comes to you in the 3 liter pot. You can double up on this if you want to as well. So, that is double up for £5 more. 127.
Yeah, that's £5 more, isn't it? So, basically the second one of those cost you just £5. That's amazing. Uh 560516 is the item number. That's what the stock is looking like at the moment.
Some more double up deals for you that are coming up later on. First of all, we have the coridalis, the blue heron, the six plug plants here. A beautiful compact plant. This um it doesn't get absolutely massive at all. I think it's about what is it about 30 cm height spread is what this grows to. Electric blue flowers, really brightly colored stems and really interesting foliage on there as well. Those flowers are super fragrant, too. I never realized when I first planted them how fragrant they are. Uh, personally, I think it's a pot plant, but it could go in the front of a border quite happily. Loves a part shade position. I found the bright sun was not good for them. Um, so do think about a part shade position for your corridor.
>> Good fellows with a fox glove.
>> Yeah, perfect actually. 480876 the item number. You can double up on that one if you wish. Next up, we have got the beautiful Osteop collection. Hardy Osteoperms. these ones. So, um, bear in mind, unlike the other ones that need winter protection, you can leave these ones out. They're great ground cover.
They can spread quite wide, actually.
You've got three different varieties.
One of them, I think, can spread between two and three feet. Adam's shaking his head. You don't think it quite get that far?
>> Uh, no, no, no. Sorry. No, I was just thinking, >> just thinking, just ignore. Oh, you're talking to Matt. Sorry. Sorry. He's talking to Matt. Um, so you've got the white, the pink, and you've got that slightly darker colored pink included in there. You will get two of each of those, the jumbo plugs, and you can double up here as well. So, you can get 12 of those. I've just planted these at the front of the border, which I think is the perfect place for them to go cuz they don't get too tall, which is brilliant. 4891, the item number. Double up if you would like to. Next up, we've got the Laura Patum. So, this is all about that foliage color, the contrast that it's going to create, not just because you've got that dark foliage on the plant, but also because you've got those bright pink flowers that appear on there. Perfect bed fellow for aces, hostas, etc. because that loves that part shade position. It does prefer slightly acidic soil though, so bear that in mind. I think it's an ideal one for container growing. Grows a little bit wider than it does tall. And I reckon that's about a meter in height eventually, but it is quite slow growing, so just bear that one in mind.
A beautiful plant. Been very popular here for us at U Garden. 510604 is the item number. Quick question. 1874 villain question for Adam. Although I could answer, but we'll put it to Adam.
Um, I have bought a new planter with a trellis. Would you take the passion flower off its cane and out of the pot and put it straight into the compost and in the planter to grow on trellis?
>> Uh, that's what I did with mine actually the other day. Yeah, cuz um I put mine in a pot and I took it off the off the actual bamboo cane very carefully though. Yeah.
>> I just sort of laid it down at the side and then I lift it up on the trellis and then just gently tied it in on the trellis. The thing is the the passion flower, it has those wonderful curling tendril things. It will it will happily self cling >> in a few days. Be that's what it's done.
It's already gripped onto the trellis.
Well, I mean, if you've got one single stem on yours, you could just train it straight off the bamboo cane, but cuz I had two or three separate stems on mine.
I kind of wanted to fan them out a little bit.
>> I had three that came off mine. I'm growing mine in the tower pot. So, off the cane in the pot and just sort of wrapped it around to get even coverage.
And now it's just I don't have to do anything to it. doing whatever it wants to.
>> And mine's got so many buds. It's only been a week. Yeah, loads and loads of buds. Really looking forward to that flower.
>> I can't wait. I love passion flowers. I think they're really beautiful. Um and Vera's got hers flowering at the moment.
That was the uh Salvia Amistad. I know a lot of you got hold of that Salvia Amistad next year. Are you going to get the Pensamman blue color back at any time soon? Marissia, I um I will ask that question. Maybe Stu will know. I don't know if he was at the stock meeting this week, but that was really popular. It did sell out very quickly for us. will certainly ask the question Marissa for you. Right, we're going to have a look at the rock stars. So, we have got the beautiful budlia and this is the little rock stars collection. If you want to grow budlier but you don't want to give up too much of your garden space to a budlier, let's face it, they can get absolutely massive. These are the varieties to go for, aren't they?
>> Well, you see the pictures there. That's how dinky these are. I mean, these are fabulous.
>> They're so small. I mean, about about 50 40 or 50 cm. That's it. Yeah. I mean, that is the maximum height they'll get to. And I was showing you one the other day that had a little flower on. It was this color. Oh, the fragrance as well.
>> So good, isn't it?
>> I mean, you cannot believe such a small plant can pump out so much fragrance in those three fantastic colors. There's the pink, the purple, and the white. And it does everything you want from a budler apart from get big. If you travel on the railways a lot, and I always mention this, you see the wild budlers, don't you? Miles and miles and miles of them.
>> I mean, three, four meters tall. They spend millions of pounds every year trying to getting rid of them and they just keep coming back. But these these are much much more friendly. So you're going to get a beautiful root system. I mean look at that. Everyone has got a root system. I'd be really really surprised if these didn't flower this year because they've got such lovely healthy stems.
>> And then you you'll get those flowers in about another sort of two or 3 weeks time because again they're a bit more mid to late summer flowering bubblers.
And once they start flowering, they'll go all the way through to the autumn and dead head as well. That little bit of video you saw there, you can see some dead flower heads on those. See the flowerheads have gone over? Clip those off. Soon as they start to go over, that'll encourage little side shoots to develop. And that will keep that display going and going and going. These are small enough to put all three of these in a large pot or container if you want to do that. Have all three colors kind of nestled against each other. Be lovely, wouldn't it?
bring in all the butterflies. Butterfly bush is their common name anyway. All the other pollinators as well. It will give you fragrance. They do lose their leaves eventually in the autumn, but they'll take all the frost and the cold during the winter time. And they're really drought torrent as well once established. They'll come back year after year. For the first couple of years, I wouldn't do anything with them.
Just let them grow, establish, enjoy them. After sort of 3 years or so on, they start to get a little bit woody or some of the old stems get a bit, you know, manky looking. Late winter, early spring, trim those back a little bit and it will always flower for you on that brand new wood the same year you clip them back. So, you're not even going to miss out on the years of flowering. Um, so you can double up on this one if you would like to. So, the deal is for three 9 cm pots, but you can double up, put two lots in your basket, and you'll get six of those, which means two of each color. And I do think because this is a nice compact budlier, we could all fit those into our garden, couldn't we?
>> Easily. I mean, if you go say like an olive planter, Somerville planter, Durham planter, you could get three of them, couldn't?
>> You could easily get three in all of those. No problem. I mean, I would even say uh you know, even from the Devport planters, you could probably get away with three in there. Why not? Yeah. I mean, and you can see how lovely the colors look when they're together in in the bit of video here. Just those lovely mix of the purple, the pink, and the white. And I can smell them right now.
The fragrance is so so gorgeous on these. So if you if you always wanted to grow a budler but you haven't got the space you have now cuz even three floors up on a balcony you can grow these.
>> 51824 is the item number if you want to go for those. Go to yuggarden.com to place your order. Make sure you're using your code please. YTV2526 is the code for this week. There is a box on the website that says do you have an offer code? That's where you put that in to get your savings and your double up pricing. Um, Matt and I are going to be at the NEC tomorrow. Um, by the way, you're not going to live, are you?
>> No, I'm here. I'm here tomorrow. Yeah.
Yeah, I'm holding the fort.
>> Um, yeah, Matt and I are going to go tomorrow. So, uh, if you're there at the NEC tomorrow and Matt says he'll see you at the bar. Yeah, we're going to go and have a little wander around. Um, but yeah, >> don't forget to take your Sharpie.
>> Take me Sharpie for the signing signing thing.
>> Yeah, right. Okay. Um, okay. There was another question. Hang on. Have you got anything that's really long flouring with a nice scent? Not I boss movers. I already have a lot of these. This is Mahi Creations.
>> Those those are amazing.
>> I was going to say um we've got the lovely Katherine Rose coming up in a little while. I don't know if you fancy roses, but they're longflowering and Catherine has the most amazing scent.
>> She does.
>> But bud rock stars. There you go. That's a good one.
>> Yeah, the budlers flower for ages and they are seriously seriously fragrant.
Can promise you that. All right, let's bring you back over to our favorites table. What we've selected for the favorites, but let's see what changes by Sunday. I'll be with you on Sunday, by the way. I'll be back uh in the potting shed on Sunday. You get your Sunday to go and fill your gut.
>> I've got my day off. Yeah, >> I'll be here. Uh right, we've got the hukura eternal flame. Now, this is a gorgeous hukura cuz you're going to get some color changing going on with the leaves, aren't you?
>> That's the great thing about hookeras. I mean, look at that there. That's the the more mature foliage. So those red colors really really kick in and you get those really pretty delicate flower stems that come up as well. Those tiny white bell-shaped flowers and hookas are another good plant for shade. So if on today's show if you're looking to create a really good look for a shady area, the fox gloves, the coridis, the hookeras will all grow in the same area together very very happily. I'll whip one out the pot for you. Lovely, lovely, beautiful root system on there. It's um a darker root color, but you can see how solid that root ball is. There's no compost falling away. And you can plant these in shade, but they do equally well in sunnier spots as well, dry soil or damp soils, and they keep their foliage all the year through.
>> It's why it's one of my mom's favorite plants, actually. She does she does really love fucas. They're lowmaintenance um in the most part. I think there's some that they die back a little bit, don't they? But they don't completely disappear. Uh and you you just never really need to do anything to them. They just keep doing what they do.
All I do with mine, I've got a lovely one called a huker palace purple which is on my north facing border and I all I do every spring be I basically take the old leaves off that got a bit damaged by the the wind and the rain and stuff and it always produces brand new really lovely foliage from the middle.
>> I'm going to ask a question. Do you cut the flowers off?
>> Uh um yeah, >> I knew you would. I was talking about this the other day and I said because they do produce those lovely flowers. I personally love the flowers on them. I feel the same about hostas, but I was like, I'll bet you Adam is the kind of man that will cut the flowers off this cuz he'll think it's more about the foliage.
>> I I'll leave them for a few days and then once like some of the lower flowers start to go over, I get fed up with them and I just take them off and I I just grow them for the leaves. But but seriously, I mean, these are such stunningly beautiful plants. You don't need flower with these. They do, but they will just give you that constant color from this amazing foliage that will sort of change color throughout the year. And they will remain pretty much semi evergreen in the winter as well. As we said, full sun, part sun, even full shade, moist or damp soils. And they're nice and compact. The actual foliage never gets any taller than about 6 in to be honest. And the flowers about so tall.
>> Very pretty plant. And you can double up here. So you could get six of those.
Again, because they're nice and compact, you can fit those in for sure. and great as Adam says for those slightly more shady spots in the garden. 561416 is the item number for that one. Now Baldick, you were asking for a double-up deal on the compost. Let's go and have a look at the website, shall we? 100125 the item number. Put that in. Uh add to basket and view the basket. Here we go. And let's have a little look. Right, we're going to double up. So we're going to stick another one in the basket. And then we're going to put in a code YGTV 2326.
enter the codes.
Uh, we're going back a couple of weeks, but our um our codes do stay in existence for a few weeks. I know we said we say there's a new code every week and use the new code. Use the new code. Yes, you do need to use the code for the new deals, but sometimes deals that we've had on in the previous couple of weeks are still available via the old codes. So, that was 2326 if you want to get your um double up deal with your saving >> on the 100125 number. That's devious.
>> That is devious.
>> That's devious.
>> I mean, it's >> it's still there, though, in it. So, >> take advantage.
>> Why not?
>> Yeah.
>> If it's still there, it's still there.
>> Don't tell anyone else. Just do it.
>> Yeah.
>> Okay, Baldrick. Grab your compost. Okay, that was the hooker eternal flame that we've got for you. Really stunning, stunning foliage color for you. Now, you're all going to wonder what the heck we're doing bringing you these right now. I look, I get it. These are the hellaore double queen mix. We will be talking to you about hellaors a lot from probably November and December and January and February because that's when they're flowering. But it's pointless from plant well not pointless. You can still plant them then by the way. But if you want flowers then >> you got to plant them now.
>> You got to plant them now. Gardening is about planning for the next season.
>> It is getting them established. Get them in the ground. I actually planted six of these myself back in March >> and they're oh I can't believe how many leaves they put on. I mean honestly they started off this size. They didn't do anything for about three or four weeks >> and all of a sudden they've got leaves on now six seven ines tall. They're really sort of bushing out and the good thing is I will definitely get flowers on my heli this winter and I've got my witch hazel there. I've got my saka cocoa all those sort of winter flowering shrubs. and creating a nice sort of winter flowering scene outside the patio doors. And that's what you can do with these. And they're they're really unusual, these plants, because when you look at the flowers, they look so delicate. If you if you're not into gardening, if you don't understand gardening, you could well think to yourself, these must flower in June and July, cuz they look really sort of delicate and sun-loving plants. But they flower at the most toughest, meanest, a horrible time of year, January, February, March, sometimes even in late December when there's really hard frost, the days are short, and they will brighten up your garden. They'll give you color in those beds and borders, pots and containers. They keep their foliage all the year through, so they're never without leaves. And what some people do, they actually when the flowers come through in the spring, the older leaves, they drop down. They will automatically drop down to ground level and you can cut those old leaves away and then they flower and they'll flower for about four, five, six weeks, lovely mixed colors, double flowers, single flowers and then lovely beautiful new leaves come up after the flowers and it just repeats year after year after year.
Eventually you can lift them and you can break them up and get like a half a dozen plants from a really well established one. But the reason we are talking about that is cuz you know I don't want to be talking about winter now, but it's going to happen. It has to happen. But don't let it be miserable in your garden. Brighten it up. Give yourself some flour and color in mid- winter to brighten up those days and and get them in the ground now so they'll get the flowers on at that time of year.
>> And we'll still be bringing you these plants once we get to winter. We'll be talking to you about them in, as I say, November, December, January, February, March. And we'll bring them to you as these plug plants. But if you're planting them then, you won't get you probably aren't going to get flowers then. You're going to have to get them in and get them established. It'll be next year where they're flowering.
Whereas, if you plant them now, you will get those flowers. They will get in and they will get established. Now, Mahi is asking about planting them out now. They got them growing in pots and want to move them to borders. Uh, can they do this now? I would say you can do this now as long as they're in a shady spot and you keep them moist. Right.
>> Yeah, definitely. I mean, and this is a thing. They are good for really, really good shade. I've I've sort of visited gardens where the these have been underplanted under trees which um you know or even holly trees and things like that and they're very drought tolerant as well once established but I've also seen them growing on grassy banks and quite open areas along with spring flowering bulbs so they're very adaptable they will grow in a sunny spot or a very shady spot they are bonkers bonkers hardy I mean they'll take -15 - 20 - 25 you will go out on a very cold winter's morning and all the foliage is kind of all sitting down >> drooping a Yeah. And they look really, really sad. But soon as the temperature lifts up, the foliage picks up again and they will flower as we said and giving you these beautiful colors at the darkest, meanest time of year.
>> Love them. I love hellaors. And they they just spread and create this lovely carpet of color at some of the dullst times of the year. Right, that's the double queen mix that we've got for you.
Six plug plants in there. Saving a couple of quid as long as you use the code YGTV2526.
The item number is 48961.
final one we've got on the table for you and I am always a fan of this one. I absolutely I mean I love agapanthus anyway but we're talking about the africanis we're talking about the big boy or it can be >> it can and >> in time >> and really really amazing blue flowers on this proper blue really blue blue flowers true blue >> and look at those and you can you can see there that one is growing at the base of a wall and that's the place to grow these grow these right up against the house on a south or west facing wall of the house they will love the warmth that emanates from the brick work they'll love that really really good drainage And they'll enjoy they'll enjoy that protection that they get in the winter from that nice shelter position. They also enjoy being potbound.
>> They really do.
>> And we've seen them actually flower in 9 cm pots before.
>> Yeah.
>> Which is incredible. Coastal plants there that you see Jersey and Gernzi, they grow all over the place there like like weeds. They just kind of seed themselves about and they will spread and clump up and eventually you can lift and divide these as well. In a very very cold area, I'd suggest growing these in a pot or a container. So, you know, during the really cold weather, you can just pop the pot in the shed or a garage somewhere just so they don't freeze brick solid. But in most parts of the UK, in that very sheltered sunny spot up against the house, as I say, west or south facing, they will get through most winters. And if you're a little bit worried, put a little bit of stroch or something over the top just to protect the crown of the plant. They'll come back year after year. They'll get bigger and bigger. They'll flower for weeks, successional flowers over a long period of time. And big jumboriferous, made that word up, flowerheads.
>> They are huge as well. The africanis is absolutely amazing. It truly is. I'm grow I've grown some of these from bare roots. I know it's going to take me a little while before they actually flower, but I'm so excited about having these. um thrives a little bit on neglect. Yeah, this is something that we would definitely give you the advice on having made the mistakes and planted them into areas where they've got too much room to roam, treated them to high quality compost, watered them on a regular basis, and they never flowered, but I've managed it now. I've learned, don't treat them too kindly.
>> Just ignore them. Ju that's the main thing. Thing is as well, they do very well on poor soil. So grally, you saw the picture them growing on the side of a beach. So sandy soils, dry soils, grally, shady, all those kind of soils where other plants struggle, they will love the drainage. They will love that really really kind of nice open structure to the soil. And in that happy place, they'll double up, they'll treble up, they'll quadruple up, they'll spread, spread, and spread. They'll bring in loads of pollinators. They'll come back year after year, and they'll just give you a multitude of these beautiful deep blue, very, very elegant flowers.
>> Really beautiful. So 56082 is the item number. It's three of the 9 cm pots. But if you want to double up and you want to create a display like we were just showing you in those pictures, do think about getting that double up deal.
Double up for £10 more or £850 if you're in the club. 56082.
Speaking of displays, let's show you this one. Oh, I forgot we had those.
We've got the hanging baskets. Um uh yes, these are the pre-planted hanging basket. These are the Beonia apricot shades. Now, that's what it's going to grow into. Um, they are the in the 25 cm pots that we've got for you. And you can get both of those home for £18 and68 for the pair. And that, by the way, is going to be your delivered price.
Remember, there is no postage to pay with shopping with us here on YGTV because you're going to use that code YGTV2526.
Now, apricot shades is a very, very, very popular um item for us. has been for years and years because well look that's why look at how beautiful that is and it's not just the flowers it's the flowers and the foliage as I always say about beonas and the fact that these can actually cope in a bright sunny position but also are very versatile and will grow happily in a part shade position as well I've just planted a hanging basket with the beonia um super cascades because my house is northeast facing and it gets a couple of hours sun in the morning and shade for the rest of the time the beonas always do brilliantly in those spots If you want the pre-planted beonia apricot shades hanging baskets, we're showing you what it will grow into. 450048 is the item number.
Ah, Matt was trying to show you a picture, but it's not working. I kept talking, Matt, but um I ran out of words. I'm sorry. I did try. Only so much I can keep saying. Um and now it's worked. Show them the picture, Matt.
Show them the picture.
Ah, Matt went for a little run around his village.
>> And look, that's now, is it?
>> That's now.
>> Wow.
>> When was this, Matt? Two days ago.
>> Yesterday. He went for a little run.
>> Look how humongous they already. And it's only the middle of June.
>> Look at those.
>> They do look like apricot shades. Matt, you're right. They look amazing.
>> So, see, it proves what we say is true, isn't it?
>> It's nice to know. It >> is. It's nice to get that.
>> Nice to know we're not fibbing to you. I know.
>> Right, we're going to move on. We've got some exciting stuff for you. We've got some grow your own. We've got some citrus and we've got a mango. My word.
Let's talk about the citrus. First of all, we have >> Don't forget the kumquat. Let's talk about the mango.
>> We have got the gorgeous uh kumquat for you. This is the Thank you, Steve. Uh this is the uh kumquat with the fruit in the 22 cm pot. Now, we guarantee it will come with some fruit attached.
>> This one has on here. It's got the little fruit and the >> I can see a few thing about these as well. You eat the entire thing, the skin and the flesh.
>> I know. And it feels weird the first time you do it, but actually it tastes delicious. You would think it's got a horrible bitterness to it cuz that's exactly what you'd expect when you, you know, the piss from an orange peel. It's bitter and horrible, isn't it?
>> It's got those tannins and things. You don't get that in this. Now, I've tried a few of these. Um, now, >> yeah, I think that's why it's bare.
>> I know when they're ripe cuz I kind of lift them up and if they come away from the plant, they're ripe. These ones, they're not coming away from the plot.
Oh, hang on.
>> Oh.
>> Oh, I've got to eat it now. Hang on. Let me I just need to buff it up a bit. Just give me a little >> little wipe from the shirt.
>> So, what a shame. Got to eat it now. Oh, >> it's juicy though, isn't it?
>> Oh, my mouth just my mouth literally just started watering as you bit into that.
>> Weird thing is the um skin is actually more sweet than the fresh inside. Yeah.
Wow. That is nice. They have pips in, by the way. Bear that in mind. Adam's just going to eat more, aren't you?
>> I'm just going to swallow the pip.
>> You don't care, right? Just get rid of it.
>> Keep talking.
>> All right. Now, citrus is dead easy to look after. I know this cuz I've got them. They do need some winter protection. That's the most important thing to bear in mind. So, they can stay outdoors in the summer months. They love being outdoors in the summer. And then you can bring them in in the winter.
They do need that winter protection. So I always say roughly from May to October they can be outside that is roughly. It depends on where you live in the country. If you can keep them above zero above sort of two degrees that's kind of ideal. Um ericacious compost they are acidloving plants and water them regularly and frequently during the spring and summer months but drastically and I do mean drastically reduce your watering down in winter. You want the top top inch or two to properly dry out and just a little bit to keep it it moist at that point. Right.
>> I tell that was that was really >> honestly my mouth is warming. I want one. Mine's still watering now because I was really really zesty. But it was weird because it it's exactly the opposite of what you were saying a moment ago, Beex, in that I mean I remember as a kid trying to eat the skin of oranges. And you do, don't you, as a kid? You I'll give it a go. I remember trying to eat banana skin once and only did that once.
>> Um but yeah, but the >> the skin on these is is super super sweet and it contrasts with the flesh inside that's a little bit more zingy.
>> So really really nice these. And if you grow them yourself as well, you can grow them organically. You can pick them directly from the garden, warmed by the sun, and you will get your own kumquats year after year after year. The flower is incredible on these as well. Really, really super gorgeous fragrant flowers.
>> I love the fragrant flowers on citrus. I just think they are magical. It's sweet.
It's like jasmine. It's really beautiful. Dead easy to grow, as I say.
And evergreen as well. And you can grow your own citrus. Honestly, it is totally possible in the UK. Warm, sunny position. Could even be a conservatory plant.
>> Yeah, I was say you'll get fruits come quite May, won't you?
>> A, you're so good. I love you. Right, let's move on, shall we? 34104. The item number for the kumquat with the fruit there. £2549, your delivered price. Look at this.
>> Right, we've made you wait long enough for those of you who are very excited to have this in here. I should have messaged Alice. I know she'd be quite excited about this. Um, hello by the way to Naomi, to uh Malc to Alysia, to Carl, all of you who have just joined the chat as well. Lovely to have you here. Um, this is the mini grafted mango tree.
Mango tree. We can grow our own mangoes.
Now, it's not going to be just a case of, you know, you're going to get mangoes easily.
>> This is going to take a bit of work.
This this is a project.
>> Yeah. But I love that. Why not do it?
>> Which is good. I want one of these.
>> I want one of these.
>> Definitely. I did try and grow one once from a sort of a mango stone. But um I couldn't actually get it to get that big. But this has been grafted onto another type of mango. So it's got that vigor. It's got that health to it.
You're looking for the um the dude. No.
Yeah. Well, I was looking for the >> the little union down there.
>> Just because they were growing out the side, so I moved them.
>> Oh, yeah. Yeah. That's what you need to do, don't you? Cuz you don't want those the little kind of suckers coming out.
>> No, we don't want suckers. Now the secret with your mango is it is a tropical tree.
>> Yes.
>> So where they grow I've been lucky enough to go to India a couple of times and I went one year when it was mango season and the people go you know bonkers. You know in this country we go mad when it's strawberry season or when it's Jersey royals or it's Jersey rolls.
Jersey rolls. Got have some Jersey royals.
>> I do love Jersey royal time.
>> Yeah. In India they they do the same. Uh so as soon as the mangoes ripen there's mango ice cream. They make sort of mango.
>> I love mangoes. Mangoes are one of my favorite fruits.
>> They are so so gorgeous. Mangoes and it broke my heart really cuz we we sort of going along some streets and they're just falling off the trees into the road and just sort of split and I think my god they're like they're 2 pound50 each in waitress and they're kind of they're going to waste on the floor. But uh yeah, I mean you can grow your mangoes but they need warm temperatures. They they never like going below about 15° centigrade. So in the winter time, late spring, early autumn, they need to be indoors. They want to be in a conservatory or on a really super bright, sunny, warm window seal. For the warmer part of the summer, they can be outside. So when the night temperatures are averaging round abouts 10, 12, 11°, that will be fine. Daytime temperatures like we've got the moment, they're going to absolutely love. So for that midsummer period, yes, you can keep these outside. If you're going to order one of these today though, introduce it to that sunny spot gradually. Don't get it home, put it straight in the full-on sun. The leaves will get bleached out.
They'll get scorched. So, introduce it gradually. Keep it nice and well watered and it will get bigger and bigger year on year. They have beautiful white fragrant flowers earlier on in the season. It is self-fertile as well, but you could get yourself a little tickling stick and go from flower to flower if you want just to ensure you've got >> Always helpful on a self plant, isn't it? it it sort of belts and braces definitely ensures that the flowers are pollinated and the leaves stay on all the year through. So this will always be evergreen. So even when it's not fruing, it will be a very beautiful indoor house plant. And if you can do all those things and if you're like me, you you're kind of very determined to get unusual things to fruit and flower. You will eventually get your own mangoes.
>> I love it. What a great idea. I mean, look, they are tropical, but citrus plants technically are tropical. With the right care, you can definitely do it. I'm following somebody on um Tik Tok actually. He lives London way, so I know they've got their own little microclimate, but he is actually growing mangoes and he has got fruits from them.
>> So, there you go. It's totally possible.
Uh right, that is the mini grafted mango tree. Let us know if you're going to go for that. 30321 the item number. £2549 could have that wing its way to you.
Right, let's jump into the chat, shall we? Um, >> oh, hang on a minute. I'm just taking >> a Alli G, bless her. She emailed us yesterday. I'm emailing you with a heavy heart sitting by my dad's bedside in hospital. Uh, he's now on end of life care. Ally, I'm so sorry for you. Uh, I feel like I can share my sad news with you because I feel part of your gardening community/family.
Um, I was happy to see Rose special dad last week and ordered it. I'm not sure if I'll be watching you live, but I will be watching you on catchup. So, let's all send Alli G all of our love. Sorry to hear that, Ally. She has though sent us some pictures as well. Uh, and yes, you are part of the family, my darling.
Here we have beautiful clatus.
>> I like these ones.
>> Can't remember what name is.
>> It's a baldy eye. This type has those super double flowers.
>> Beautiful.
>> Yeah, they produce double flowers and single flowers on the same plant. But yeah, that's a knockout one. That one.
gorgeous grown in your flower pot as well. Yeah, absolutely.
>> See those giveaway loops there?
>> Yeah, it does give it away, doesn't it?
Very pretty, Ally. Let's have a look at what else you sent us. Uh we have got Oh, I'M SO PLEASED to see this. Did you see my video I did of this the other day?
>> This is the hydranger black diamonds midnight pearl. Oh my word, I am thrilled with this plant. Anybody else that got this? I mean, that looks exactly like our marketing pictures, doesn't it?
>> It does. I mean, because that's our pictures are real, aren't they? They're not AI. They're the real deal. I have got this, but mine's only just It's not opened out properly yet.
>> I'm going to show you my video later.
>> Yeah, that that I mean, that is knockout. That That is like right up there on the hydranger list, isn't it?
>> I love it. Looking great.
>> It's a VIP of hydrangeas, that one.
>> And some more gorgeous roses. We've got some um um um um what are they called?
Nandinas.
I can't believe I've got >> Ask me for the for the type of rose. I'm not sure which one. No idea. I bet they smell delicious though.
>> It looks like one's got super super good fragrance to it.
>> Looking good though, Annie G. Thank you so much. Um and I do hope you're watching us on catchup, my lovely.
Right, Marissa says, "Uh Tomatoes, when Derek first planted these, they looked very spindly. Now look at them."
>> Yeah, look at them.
>> Hey, they're happy tomatoes. Those >> very happy. You got some flowers on there. Uh I'm assuming mine have got a few tomatoes on now.
>> Another three or four weeks be picking Toms on those. We've got this lovely warm weather coming for the next couple of weeks is me doing my weekly weather forecast. Here we go. Weather man, Adam.
You know, warm air flow coming up from the southwest drawing in that warm air from the Atlantic. So yeah, it's going to be super mild nights, daytime temperatures 25° down the south of England.
>> I love it.
>> Sort of upper teens, low 20s in northern warmth. really warm nights as well. So, it's going to be super duper growing time for all those plants that like warmth.
>> Dingo. Hello, Dingo. Afternoon all. Just some pics of roses and pots and boxes and other bits.
>> No, not just some pics. They're never just, they're always fantastic pics.
Beautiful rose.
>> That is so nice. Roses have done so well this year. They've really, really done brilliantly.
>> Look at that braner in the background, though.
>> Oh, look at you showing off with your braner.
>> I love a braner, though. I always spot those. Um, let's have a look what else Dingo sent us.
>> Oh, that's a nice one.
>> That's a pretty one.
Look at that. Really bright red color.
Gorgeous. Well done, Dingo. What else has he sent us? And more roses. Dingo's got loads of roses going.
>> They're just looking so good at the moment. All the little raindrops there on the leaves as well.
>> I do love it. I love it. Love it.
>> There more.
>> Uh, there's more. There's more. There's more. Hang on.
>> Oh, come on. This is good.
>> Geranium fire queen.
>> Look at those. Really good.
>> There's so many pots you've got, Dingo.
>> The pot marolds there as well. The orange and red, orange and yellow ones we were doing.
>> Yeah.
>> Looking lovely.
>> So pretty. Uh I'm going to give one more of Dingo's photos.
>> Oh, this is good. Look at this picture.
>> That's beautiful.
>> Wa.
>> That's absolutely stunning. That >> that's that's the look that I've got in my garden. That's the look I love.
There's no soil there. Look. no soul showing and you've got all the plants all kind of growing sort of slightly into each other but not overwhelming each other. That I mean that is just charming.
>> I'm getting there. I need another year or two and I'll be there.
>> It does take time for things to kind of get to that point but look all the contrast with the Brunner, the steelby, the fern, the peony. All just looking so gorgeous together. Wow. That's that's impressive. Love it.
>> Nice one, Dingo. Uh right, where are we going now? We're going to uh Edward. Oh, hang on. He says, "Hang on." You said that was the last one. Okay, we've got more pictures. I've got Edward. I've got uh Grimmie. I got Penny. We're going to come to you. Uh East Coast Pics, Nathan, I should say. We will come to your pictures. So, don't go anywhere. We're here until 4:00. So, we still got more than an hour left with you. We'll come to those other pictures in a little while. Right, Budlier, Little Rockstars, just a couple of your favorites so far.
These have been the beautiful Little Rock Stars. A Budlier that remains gorgeously compact. We are talking teenytiny about 50 by 50 cm. That is it.
Multiple flowers on each of the plants and absolutely beautiful and gorgeous fragrance you get from them. And they are going to bring the pollinators into the garden as well. Really simple and easy to look after. Completely hardy and all you got to do is dead head. Keep those flowers coming for a nice long season throughout the um sort of mid to late summer and going into early autumn.
51824. Double up deal available for you on that one. So you could get six of them. That means two of each color. Next we've got the hukura eternal flame double- up deal available here as well.
Now they will mature into that color.
The color at the moment is much more green with the kind of red veining in the center. But as those leaves mature, you do get these gorgeous flame colors.
Pink flowers that will rise up out the top. Nice and compact, mostly evergreen.
You know, they will sort of die back down just a teeny bit during the winter months, but you do get year round interest with these. And this is why hukura tends to be a very popular option. Doesn't mind a sunny spot. Loves to be in a part shade spot as well. Um it's just an easy plant that gives you lots of interest throughout the year.
561416 is the item number if you'd like to go for that double up deal. Stick two lots in your basket. Now I know hella you might wonder what on earth you bringing as hella balls at this time of year for. Well, it's because now is the perfect time to actually get them planted because you've got the next 6 months to get them in and get established so they can put on some growth. They can get their roots established and then when we get to December, January, February, March, you will have some flowers. You don't have to wait to get those flowers. And of course, with hellaors, they do create wonderful ground cover. They are fantastic for those shadier spots in the garden. Great for underplanting around the base of trees because they don't mind being in those shady spots and they flower for you at some of the most punishing times of the year. So great to add some color in during the winter season. 480961 is the item number there. And you're going to get six of those gorgeous pug plants. Just look at those flowers.
They're so pretty.
Agapanthus africanis blue. These are the big agapanthus or they will get big. Now you've got three 9 cm pots here. You can double up on these. So, if you do want to create a display like you just saw in that previous picture, you can have multiples of these. They love to have their roots hugged. They like to be a little bit punished. They don't mind um a bit of poor treatment, poor soil, um a slightly dry conditions. I I keep them regularly watered while you're establishing them, but once they're established, they can be quite drought tolerant as well. Love, love, love a sunny spot in the garden and give you those gorgeous tall flowers. And these can be the tall ones. Some we say it'll get 40, 50 cm. these. They can be a meter in height quite easily. 56082 the item number and you can double up on these if you would like to. And of course, can't go anywhere without talking about that mango because we do believe this is going to be one of the most popular items that we bring you. Uh the mini grafted mango tree in the 1 and 1/2 liter pot. It's beautifully established. It is a project. You know, it's a bit like citrus. Yes, you can grow it here, but it does require some help. You can't just plant it and, you know, hope for the best. Do give it some care and attention. It will love warmth.
It will love being outside in the summer. Um, you do need to give it protection in the winter. You want to keep it, did you say above about sort of 15° ideally.
>> It It doesn't mind dipping a little bit below 15, but average temperature no lower than 15 generally.
>> There you go. So, keep it somewhere nice and warm. It'd be a perfect conservatory plant where it's nice and sunny. My southeast FA uh southwest facing patio probably an absolutely glorious place for it. 3000321 is the item number if you'd like to go for it. That miniig grafted mango tree.
How cool would it be to grow your own mangoes? Just pick a mango off that tree and be like, I I grew that.
>> Well, we've shown you can grow your own pineapple.
>> Yeah, why not?
>> So, yeah. All it needs is just that love and care. If you're dedicated enough, you will get to that point of having your own homegrown mangoes.
>> I'd like to give it a go. Right. Laura Patalum for you. The Laura Patalam Black Pearl. a dark foliage plant that gives you a gorgeous contrast in the garden.
>> I'm thinking as well what would be good to underplant this would be the lovely hooker eternal flame. Yeah, >> that look wouldn't it? Cuz these both good for shady positions. Look how stunning this plant is fill. Yeah, hellaors. Oh, that would be great as well because this is um evergreen or semi- evergreen depending on the winter.
In very cold winters, they can shed some of their leaves. In milder winters, they keep their leaves. But they're a dappled shade loving plant. So the places where you grow your hostas, your fox gloves, your aces, all those sorts of plants be a great combination with those. Needs a slightly acidic soil as well. So you've already got that acidic soil, you're fine. You got your rodies, aelas growing well. Plunk it straight in the ground, no issue at all. If you haven't and you're thinking, I love this plant. I like the contrast of the lovely ribbon-like flowers and the foliage.
We'll grow it in a pot. Just use our aricacious compost. It'll be very happy in a pot or container. You can put the pot in a sort of a shade or semi-shady position. It'll take a little bit of sun, but it certainly doesn't want to be in the big full-on kind of midday sun.
It can get a little bit scorched. And it's a plant that eventually tends to get wider than it does taller. And it has a beautiful arching habit to it.
Flowers late winter into spring, but also it will sporadically flower at other times of the year as well. I mean, I think you and I, Beex, when whenever we brought this plant, we've always seen flowers on it at some time or another, haven't we? It just seems to flower whenever it wants.
>> It does.
>> Does whatever it wants.
>> Yeah, it does. I mean, the textbooks will tell you it shouldn't be flowering now, but it is. It's got some flowers.
>> Last year was crazy. It just it just seemed to be flowering all the way through the summer for some reason.
>> Yeah, it did. But um yeah, it's it's it's a great plant. I mean, it's really really easy to grow in that really really happy position.
>> Now, you can container grow these and you can plant them in the ground. In fact, container growing is exactly what Sean is doing with his Laura Patalam or should I say his mom's. So, I'm actually in my mom's garden. This is what we call her little oriental garden. I mean, the rest is really traditional over there, but I want to show you one of the most striking plants. It's called Laura Patalum. It's really unusual. I absolutely love it. So, it is evergreen and the foliage is the most incredible intense burgundy. That is so beautiful.
But in springtime, these flowers and the flowers it gets are almost like little clusters of crimson ribbons that are like fireworks. I love the fact that it's very slow growing, so it's not going to be invasive. It's got a lovely tranquility and I think it works really well with things like aces, cord lines.
I've got the Charlie boy there. Also looks great next to water features, buddas, that kind of look. But it is a beautiful, beautiful plant and I I adore the way it naturally grows. So it kind of meanders. It just gently kind of trails over the edge of pots and things like that. It's quite low growing. But that color foliage and the shape of the leaves is just spectacular. So if you order yours now, get it established for springtime and you wait kind of March, April, you get the most amazing flowers as well. It's known as Laura Patal.
I really like it in that pot against the white. I think that's quite a young plant. Um cuz that that film I think that's nearly two years old. We should go back and film again because I imagine it's filled out more now and looks really pretty against that white container.
>> I did think Shan was looking a bit young in that one to be fair.
>> Yeah, I know, right?
That is the beautiful Laura patal and black pearl for you then in the 15 cm pot. That's what it's going to look like at full maturity. And you can double up on these if you wish. You did. It does prefer to be slightly ericacious, doesn't it? It does. Would you go full ericacious or >> Yeah, I would mix. Yeah, if you're going to grow it in a pot, just go straight for ericacious compost. If you got acid soil already in your garden, put it straight in the ground.
>> Yeah. All right. 510604 the item number for the beautiful Laura Patalum Black Pearl. We're going to move on to a stunning one for you now. And I'm going to get it. I want that one with the flowers on. This is the beautiful Laura Patalum Black Pearl. Oh yeah, that fragrance. You've smelt these before, right?
>> Yeah.
>> It's gorgeous.
>> It is gorge. Now, I'm going to say something.
>> I got I got I got a Sorry, I'm not showing you, am I? It's quite a pale blue on there, and it does. It gets darker than that. It does get darker than that. For sure. It goes really quite a dark blue. Very much like the the pictures here. And I know this because I have grown it. I have got this in my garden. And it produces those beautiful bright blue electric blue flowers.
>> Mine are still flowering right now.
>> Are they?
>> Yeah. I got them in my north facing border. And I tell you, I really, really like the foliage as well. It's interesting, isn't it?
>> Do you know that um the Have you ever come across the maiden hair fern?
>> Oh, yes.
>> That's got the foliage reminds me of the foliage on a maiden hair fern. Really beautiful, beautiful, intricate, delicate foliage.
>> That picture, by the way, is my >> That's yours right there.
>> My garden.
>> Look at that. I mean, it's such a classic plant. I mean, it's not a huge plant, but it is I mean, it's got a massive personality for a small plant.
The stems are bright red as well. And then you've got this deep kind of like electric blue flower. And you you sort of made me laugh earlier on when you talk about the fragrance of it because I remember the first time I ever grew this myself.
>> Had no idea it was fragrant. Me too.
>> Went out in the garden one day and I was thinking, what is that lovely lovely sweet fragrance? Didn't have a clue what it was. Eventually I realized it was these and I thought, wow. So they got fragrance. They've got color. Um and they are really really good to grow with the laurel patalum because if you want to sort of like a serving suggestion if you say if you gone for the laurel patalum and you want to underplant with something you could put those underneath. Yeah.
>> They love cuz they both love that shady.
>> They do definitely prefer the shady spot. When I first got them several years ago now I had three and I put one in each of my three borders. One's a full sun border. The other two are part shade. The one in the full sun border.
>> Yeah.
>> Didn't did not like it at all.
>> No. I mean, I've got shriveled up. Yeah, I'm the sun. I mean, mine's in a north facing border and they get a little bit of sun this time of the year because the sun's really high now, but most of the year they're in shade. It's it's moisture retentive soil as well, so it never properly dries out. Uh, and I'm quite lucky cuz I've got the wild yellow form of this growing in my garden as well.
>> Oh, nice.
>> And it's growing in the same place. I've got a blue and a yellow one >> growing together. Yeah. And they are so so and they even seed about. They're so so easy to grow. So plant them in that damp shady position right at the front of the border cuz only get to about 6 7 in tall. They'll flower for weeks. They have the most intricate, delicate, attractive foliage and they'll come back for you year after year in an most amazing blue color.
>> Okay, so you can double up. You can get six uh sorry, you can get six or you can double up and you can get 12 of the coridalis. We'll swap the details over and give you the details of the coridalis because it seems to be still on the lot of darling. There you go.
480876 double up uh for what is that £15 more 15 nearly £15 more. So you can get another set of those. Obviously it's much less if you're in the club because you will get the 15% discount off there as well. 480 876 is the item number if you would like to go for the Corodalis Blue Heron. Now we've lost the board for the um Daphne perfume princess. It's disappeared. We know it's in existence somewhere, but can we find it? Doesn't matter though. Matt's got pictures to show you. Uh the Daphne perfume princess. I've got this.
>> I got this as well.
>> It's a stunner.
>> Has a shrub ever been more aptly named than this? Because oh my goodness me. If you want perfume, this is up there. This is This has got to be in my top five where I've got 10 things in my top five of of super super fragrant plants.
>> This is about >> Yeah, I'm with you on Yeah, this is about number seven in my top five of plums that have got good fragrance. And it's another one that does it right in the middle of winter.
>> Yeah, it's amazing.
>> It is. And on a winter's day, you go out, especially on those milder winter days, and you don't even need to bend down to get to the fragrance because it's it's quite a small plant. I I mean, eventually they they can get to about a meter and a half, 2 m tall after a long, long time. Mine is in an east facing border, so it gets a little bit of sun first thing in winter.
>> By about 10:00, it's in shade the rest of the day. Moisture retentive soil. It gets a little bit more sun this time of year. But I have seen them in very open borders as well in gardens that I've visited and they do well there. They're like an organic rich soil. So digging lots of compost. Our premium professional compost will be really really good. They're evergreen so they keep their leaves all the year through and they flower from a very young age.
Even we've had plants like the one we've got here even flowering at this size. So get this home, plant it now, put it in that lovely spot. The chances are you get your first little clusters of flowers late winter to early spring in 2027. You'll enjoy the fragrance. You'll enjoy the ease of this plant. Mine I planted this size about four years ago now >> and it's still only probably two to three foot tall. That's all. I've got mine planted in the border next to the Saka cocka which is brilliant because they tend to be flowering at the same time and so you've got that gorgeous mixture of fragrance and it is super fragrant the daffany perfume princess gorgeous cluster of flowers and I love love love the color of them as well you can double up here if you wish so double up for10 more which is £850 if you're club member because you do get that 15% discount so one of those plants could cost you just £8.50 50. Totally winter hardy, perennial plant, amazing winter fragrance, and it's evergreen. I mean, it ticks a lot of gardening boxes right there. 51038 is the item number if you would like to go for that.
>> And it's another one that will look good with the heli as well. If you want, if you've gone for the heli, think about under planting this with those cuz you get the flowers >> at the same time.
>> Now, let's move over, shall we? because we've got the osteoperm collection here where you're going to get three different colors of osteosperm in the jumbo plug plants. I have planted these this year. I'm a big fan of osteoporum.
Anyway, I've always got the um uh tend more tender varieties in the past, but I decided it's time to go for the, you know, the hardy variety.
>> I've got these as well. It's like a competition, isn't it? I got these.
>> Mine are flowering right now in those three gorgeous different colors. You've got the white, you've got the pink, and you've got the purple. And I've got mine on a really um sort of well- drained sloped area of the garden with a really good sandy soil. And I've had a lot of jip from people on social jip. I said from people on social media saying >> you you can't get hardy osteops in the UK. There's no such thing. Oh, they'll die in the winter.
>> No, they won't.
>> They won't. Now, the secret to these to get them through is mega mega good drainage. that the most brilliantly well- drained bit of soil you've got in your garden, full sun, that's where they'll get through. If you put them in a shady position or somewhere they're going to sit in very heavy, wet, cold soil in the winter, they'll rot off. So, you can plant them in rockeries, beds and borders, pots and containers, sink gardens, but even if you got like a really old bashed up patio >> and you you've got a few sort of corners broken off the paving slabs, if it's nice and sunny, just make a little hole, plant them there. They'll love all the heat from the surrounding paving stones.
They'll spread. They flower for ages.
Mine has just started flowering now.
Planted them in spring. Got them from you garden this size. I'm going to keep dead heading and they'll still be flowering all the way into September, October. And you're going to get those three fantastic, gorgeous colors as well.
>> Very important to keep on top of your dead heading with osteioperm. If you, you know, slack on that job, it will slack on giving you the flowers. Quick job. Just keep going out, dead heading every couple of days. Trim away some of those faded flowers and they'll keep going for you. 48091 is the item number if you would like to go for the jumbo osteosperm and plug plants and you can double up if you want to. So you can get 12 of those in your garden, right?
>> That's good. And that one, >> it's proper good, isn't it?
>> Katherine's rose is here. It's in the potting. No, you're not having it.
>> I am.
Oh my word.
Even Matt thinks this smells good.
>> Well, that's good because he normally normally smells of wheat.
>> Yeah. We >> But >> that is so good. I should have got one of these.
>> Oh, that's nice, isn't it?
>> Get Get out of it.
>> I just want Can they Can they make Freze in that fragrance?
>> That is so delightful.
>> That's nice, isn't it? It's like >> Go again.
Should we do one each?
>> I don't think that one will smell, will it?
>> It's It's got slightly less fragrance.
>> It's beautiful. Oh, he's not watching us now. Oh, look. This is the beautiful half open quick, didn't they? Those flowers.
Look at that. You seen a rose do that before?
>> That is the transition of it opening up.
It's quite interesting the way it sort of pulses like that, isn't it? Do you think that's at night time and then opening in the daytime?
>> Yeah. A lot of sort of they call it Nick Tenasty, don't they? When flowers open and close at night. Yeah. Um, oh, but look at that. This is a classic. Look at those clusters of beautiful, beautiful flowers. Heart miss roses. I must be dead proud of this one.
>> They've got to be, honestly. That was amazing. So, we it was launched at the Chelsea Flower Show last year. We were very lucky to be invited to go last year. Um, hopefully we'll get invited next year. We'll have to wait and see.
But the fragrance, I mean, I remember being there and smelling it. But I I hopefully we've got across to you how absolutely amazing this rose smells. It is delightful >> and it's compact. It's only about sort of 80 to 90 cm tall. So you can grow it in a pot or a container. And the the color is actually even a bit more intense than you you see there. Well, or the one I'm looking at is slightly more intense. And you >> It's like a coral pink, isn't it?
>> It's a coral pink. And it is one of those roses. You know, sometimes you go to smell a rose that looks beautiful and you and there's nothing there and you think, "Oh, that's a bit disappointing."
This one smells every bit as gorgeous >> as it looks.
>> And look, right, can I just show you?
Because there is a beautiful bud here as well. Look how deeply colored that bud is. And then it opens up. And look how perfect that rose bud is there. And then you've got the transition as it opens up to that. So here you are watching the whole journey sort of unfold. Isn't that beautiful?
>> And you even wore a top to match as well.
>> I even wore a top to match >> just to celebrate how beautiful this rose is. And it's got super healthy foliage. I bet Katherine smells that good as well.
>> I I reckon she does.
>> Of course. Five pound donation as well.
>> Yes, I forgotten the charity that it goes to. It's the Royal Masters, isn't it? That's it. So, yes, charity donation on this rose as well. So, it is our rose of the week. We have brought the price down for you already, but £5 off whatever price it is that you're paying will go to the Royal Marsden um charity, >> which is great. So, >> I love it. It >> is good. I just I've got another one.
Another another quick whiff.
>> Oh, it's so good.
>> Oh, yeah. That's nice.
>> I am weirding Aaron Adam out today. I feel like I'm making it my mission to weird Adam out today. Right. 78034 Katherine's Rose. You need some good compost to put it in, don't you? Here is some of the best compost with Peter, our head gardener.
>> We describe this as premium professional compost. And the reason for that is it is the compost that is known this formula we have perfected over decades.
I've been using it for decades. We have perfected it over decades. You've got a blend of the best pets plus wood fiber that you can imagine. Now by volume approximately 50% of this compost is wood fiber. And the balance is made up of a blend of pets. And there are three different pets. So you've got things like spagnum moss pete which is renewable. You've got sedge pete and and then you've got darker spagnum as well in there. So you've got three different pets. You've also got you can see actually just there there slowrelease fertilizer. These little green what look like little eggs. You'll see those dotted among the compost when you're planting it. That's slowrelease fertilizer. One of the most expensive ingredients in any compost is fertilizer. You can see that there's another one just down below. Um, that is amazing because that will deploy nutrients to the roots of whatever you grow in this compost just when they need it over the next six months. You then got what's called a buffer. Now, Pete in particular is naturally acidic. So, and plants like to be just on the acidic side of neutral as a generality. There are exceptions. So, things like roodendrrons and aelas, they love to be properly um acidic in terms of the the the ericacious soil or compost they're growing in. But most things like it just on the slightly acidic edge of neutral.
So um that's what this is designed to give you. So it's got a pH buffer to keep it in exactly that zone. The wood fiber keeps the sort of perfect air water pocity ratio which is what we talk about in the trade. All these complicated terms but but it's what plants need is they need they need they need a jungle gym to grow in. So they need a jungle gym for their roots which is called growing medium. They need some water and they need some air and they need nutrients. And and when you've got the perfect compost, it blends the air and the water and the constituents of the compost. It all blends together to give the perfect environment. That's what this particular compost does, which is why it's trusted by us. We will be growing approximately 150,000 potted roses on this nursery this year. That's roughly what we grow most years. We'll be growing I don't know how many hanging baskets but our pre-planted hanging baskets that will be available later.
You would have bought them in the autumn and last spring as well. They grow in this compost. We will grow countless perennials whether they be in the 9 cm square pots or the 3 liter pots or the 5 liter pots plus fruit trees. And this is the compost we use for all of those things. So we trust it. The trade trusts it. And actually based upon the the well literally hundreds and hundreds of thousands of of bags of this particular compost that you've bought over the years, you definitely trust it as well.
And um you know and and and actually Pete is a is a thing we need to think about. Pete, not me. I I happen to also be Pete, but it's the Pete that's in here that that we're talking about. Um >> we can still use Pete in our gardens right now. And actually the alternatives generally speaking are a bit iffy. So if you want to get the best results in my view, use this particular compost for as long as you can. It's got 50% other material in it, which is the lowest level we could get to and still have a professional quality product for you and for ourselves. So we've been as eco-friendly as we can. And we jumped on to that particular that approach years and years and years ago. So this is the same formulation that we've had for at least the last six or seven years with 50% um other material to bulk out the Pete and it work it still works better.
So I would say this is in my opinion it's the only compost I use at home.
It's the compost we use on the nursery.
I can't recommend it highly enough.
>> It's the only compost I use other than Ericacius when I need it.
>> Me as well.
>> It is I've used in excess of a thousand bags of it. Not just >> not just in your garden.
>> Obviously not cuz I wouldn't meant to get my patio doors open would I? So, yeah, being in customers gardens as well.
>> There you go. Uh, okay. So, the premium professional compost is available for you. It's the 110 liter option that we've got for you today with the 100 grams of the soluble fertilizer. Now, we did actually give you a sneaky way of getting hold of the double up deal.
One25.
Use the code YTV2326.
1 would be the item code if you want to double up. It's the 250 L options. It's the deal we had a couple of weeks ago.
Um, so you need to use those numbers one25 and YTV2326.
Bear in mind there's no postage to pay.
So if you do want to get the double up deal or this week's whatever, just do it in a couple of separate orders and then you're still going to get all of your deals using the correct codes. Okay.
Right. That's the deal we've got for you this week. Obviously it is the 110 liter and you're going to get the fertilizer.
Let given you options. Go for whatever you fancy. We're going to go on to our flowering fuchsia tree for you next.
Now, this is not a choice. We will pick one for you. There are two colors.
Sorry, you can't choose. But they're both very beautiful.
>> They're stunning. They need a few more flowers on there, don't there?
>> I mean, I I think it's a problem with how few flowers are on there.
>> Yeah. I mean, there's no color on these, is there? Really? Look at this. This >> Why would you want that in your garden, eh?
How do you breed a fuchsia that flowers with those many flowers? It's It's just incredible. And they self dead head as well. The flowers kind of just drop off.
>> You don't need to dead head at all, do you?
>> No, they they just drop off and then all you got to do feed them, water them, and these are going to look this good right the way through summer into autumn.
>> And definitely feed, please. Fuchesia are hungry. They are. And you know, I mean, we say this about most plants.
Feed them because it's important.
There's only so many nutrients in the ground. they will deplete those nutrients. But fuchsia, seriously, they are quite hungry plants, aren't they?
>> And if you feed them, it will keep them green. It will keep the flowers going.
And use um I mean, obviously our blooming fast is good, but if you got any tomato feed around, that's good because it encourages flowers.
>> But bring in loads and loads of pollinators as well. And these strictly speaking aren't hardy.
>> No.
>> But if you keep them frost free during the winter, you can get them through from one year to other >> container grow. you know, even if you want it to look like it's in a in a border, stick it in a pot and stick it in the border. I've done that so many times with things that are um tender that I need to give winter protection to. If you just put it in the pot and put it in the border, it still looks like it's a border plant, but it makes it really easy for you to be able to move it.
>> And I like the standard stem on there as well. There's a little shoot at the base there coming on that standard stem. Just just take that off. So, just remove that. You don't want you don't want any kind of um stems or shoots coming up on the stem down there. And you could shape it a little bit if you wanted to, but I quite like the shape they are already.
But goodness me, if you want instant color out of the box, soon as you get it home for silly amount of time, window box, big window box, pots, containers, anywhere sunny, part sun, don't have to be full sun. In fact, fuchsia don't actually like to be baked with that fullon midday sun. It can stress them out a little bit and they will. But wow, I mean, I'm just almost speechless about this.
>> A really good one for bringing pollinators into the garden. And bees in particular go quite crazy for fuchsia.
So if you want a pollinator garden, then fuchsia are definitely, you know, something that you should add into whatever space it is you might have.
These could be grown in pots on patios or balconies and things as well. So it's not like you actually need loads and loads of space. This is definitely something for every garden.
>> Shame we haven't got some pots to put them in.
>> I mean, it's a real shame, isn't it?
>> Be nice. If we'd had some good pots on the show, these could have gone in. That would have been a really good idea, >> right? It's £16.99 for that. By the way, um if you go for two, um they will try and pick two of the same color cuz most and and I know it's not everybody, but most people would would quite like two of the same color. So that's what our pickers are have been instructed to do.
Um so if you do go for a pair of those, we have got some twin packs of pots for you. We're going to start with the Davenport, which is one of our in fact, should we put them in? It's one of our newest additions to the pot range that we've got. And I think that that looks absolutely beautiful. elegant in their backs.
>> There's a few interesting features about this, isn't there?
>> Yeah, I like the little bung in the bottom there, which is a really good idea because Jake was saying the other day, if you grew citrus in these, >> obviously during the summer time, you want the drainage hole cuz the pots outside, but then when you bring it in the winter indoors, you don't want the water wiggling out the bottom, do you?
>> No.
>> So, you got that little bung you can put back in, make it waterproof again.
>> So, this just needs uh obviously there's a there's a bung here. Oh, it's wet on the inside. It's just dripped down my arm. There's a bung here and you're going to take that out and you're going to drill that hole in there to give you the um drainage hole.
>> Literally just drill through there. Then after >> lose that, put that in. You know that junk drawer that we've all got in the kitchen. The one where you you stick everything that you don't know what you need to do with. Everyone's got a junk drawer in the kitchen.
>> You have all the kind of the batteries in there, don't you? You have um all your sort of felt tip pens and >> stick that in the junk drawer so you know where it is and then when you need to, you can do that with it. Or basically the idea with this is that you've got options. So, it can be an outdoor pot that you put the drainage hole in or it could be a pot cover for indoor plants as well.
>> And if you want to make it sort of outdoor indoor, you can do that because we were saying just a little while ago with the fuchsia. If you bring them indoors during the winter time, keep them frost free. There's no reason you can't get these to go from one year to the other.
>> Yeah.
>> So, obviously in the summertime, if you put the fuchsia in one of these pots, you want the drainage, >> but then if you're going to bring it in and put it in a conservatory or a hallway or a lingu or somewhere, then you want to bung the hole back up. Um, you want to release the um, bug hole back up again so you get the right way around so the water doesn't come out all over your carpet or all over the floor in your conservatory or somewhere like that.
>> Beautiful design. I got to say it's one of the sort of toughest of the pots that we >> seriously rigid pots those aren't they?
Yeah.
>> And um, I love the motif on the side and even the texture and they actually feel like the real deal as well. And it was weird because when um Stu handed me a pair of these to start with, I wasn't expecting them to be I mean they're not heavy, but yeah, I think um Jake says they've got some heft to them. Yeah.
>> And Matt says they're a strong gauge.
>> There you go.
>> So there you go.
>> That gives you some idea of what we're trying to get across here.
>> Good pots.
>> 35 cm diameter, 2973. And that is the pair for two of them. So, it's great if you're going for two things, you know, a pair of something. Then you've got pots that can go in there as well.
>> UV stable, frost resistant. So, obviously you wouldn't plant them this deep in the pot.
>> Yeah, but you get the idea.
>> You get the idea. There you go. How stunning they can look in there. They look really charming.
>> Yeah, they do. I think they look knockout. And you'll have these pots for year after year after year.
>> All right. 13729 is the item number if you would like to go for the Davenport pots. But we've got a couple of urns for you next. Now, these are the Kalista urns. I'm a big fan of these. I think they're really pretty. I do love an N anyway. I think they add a bit of height and a bit of elegance. Um, and those all right, we're putting the fuchsia in, but it could be so many different things you put in here.
>> Lots of things we've got on the show today would look good in here. You could, for instance, you could put the Nandina in here. That would look good.
You could put the little rock stars.
>> Yeah, the budlers would look great, wouldn't they?
>> Yeah, they'd look good in there. Now, I just want to show you cuz these are made of plastic, but there are drainage holes in the bottom there. But when it comes to the construction, all you've got to do is twist. So, those just slit those just slot into the bottom and then you twist it into place and that's it locked in place. There's no screws or anything that you need. And it does mean you can easily deconstruct them as well if you want to stack them and store them away somewhere. But I like that you don't have to get the drill or or screwdriver out.
>> Nice and straightforward. And I like the look of these cuz I think these give out various kind of fills. I think they're a bit goth.
>> I think they're a bit French like >> Parisian. Yeah. But kind of going back sort of a bit Marian twinet kind that kind of time, but also I think they've got a touch of the Victorian about them as well.
>> They they just they look so elegant, UV stable, frost resistant.
>> They look classic with this red fuchsia.
I mean, apart from the bamboo cane, that's Oh, hang on. Let's take that out a minute. That's kind It'll probably flop over if I do that. Let's just take that cuz that's There you go.
>> They're really good for maybe some trailing plants as well. I mean the fuchsia. Well, it's cuz it's a bit deeper, but um you know, if you get something that's just gent gently sort of trailing over the edge, it' look really pretty, wouldn't it?
>> No, just I've got two of these myself.
Yeah. I've still not put anything in them, though. I've got them in the greenhouse and I actually need to find the perfect plant. I will do eventually I'll get a plant home one day and I think that's it. That's what's going in the Kalistas.
>> I love it honestly. So, that's the twin pack of the Kalista vintage rust urns for you. 30398 the item number. You will get a pair. So you'll get two of those.
And we have also got the um Somerville planters for you. Now I have got one of these and I think we have added the drainage holes into the bottom of these because mine does not have the drainage holes in. Oh, >> okay.
>> I want to double check. Both of these have got the holes in already. And I'm fairly convinced that you've got the option to either drill the holes into these or not. I use one of these as a pot cover for my great big straitzia, my bird of paradise that I've got um indoors. And these are some really tough ones as well, aren't they?
>> These are good for big things. I mean, for instance, the kumquat that we've got, that could live in here forever.
The mango could live in here forever because you've got the depth, you've got the width. They're really strong, rigid pots as well. Lovely, lovely motif on the side there. And because they've got that detect, you could probably even >> Do you reckon you rose in there?
>> Catherine rose in there.
>> Oh, that would look so elegant.
>> That would look good.
>> I'm always going to sniff that rose.
>> It is gorgeous.
>> That's an amazing scent.
>> These these are some of my favorites.
>> The Somerville.
>> Yeah, the Somervilles are classy and elegant. And also because they are that neutral color tone, um I don't think it matters what kind of color scheme you got. Also, I think it would work with any plant that you want to put in here.
I tell you what would look amazing in this Somerville planter is the Laura Patalum with its dark foliage.
>> That'd be a good contrast hanging over the side as well.
>> Absolutely gorgeous dark foliage. That would look incredible.
>> That's looking classic. I like that, Beex. That is a really, really beautiful suggestion. Of course, you can put the aricacious compost in as well.
>> Absolutely. which will really really suit it.
>> Loads of ideas of what you could grow in here. And also, you're still allowing it to get to its full size because you've got a good capacity. I reckon that's probably a 40 L, maybe 45 L.
>> Even the amistad you could grow in there, which look nice. Those lovely deep purple flowers, gorgeous um kind of healthy, lustrous green foliage, >> contrasting.
>> What about a hydranger?
>> Oh, that Yeah, that' be nice.
>> You could grow a hydranger in here.
>> Yeah, >> could have two hydrangeas. one either side of the door. That would look really good, wouldn't it? Remember, they're frost resistant, UV stable. They are rigid, um, uh, you know, tough and sturdy plastic. They are designed to last for many, many years, these pots.
This is why we bring you these plastic ones. They're lighter weight, which means it's easier to move around the garden. Obviously, I appreciate once it's full of compost and a plant, it will be a bit heavier, but you haven't got the added weight of the stone or terra cotta. And, you know, I wouldn't do that with a stone or terra cotta pot cuz it would have just cracked.
>> You only did it once. Yeah, exactly.
>> That'd be it, wouldn't it? Game over.
>> Done. And and the cost, bear in mind, the price you're looking at, 33.98, is for two of these. If that were stone, terra cotta, glazed ceramic, you'd be paying 70 or 80.
>> Yeah. Probably every two or three years as well, cuz once the frost has fractured them and busted them and reduced them to like crocs, whereas these won't do that. Exactly.
>> They'll take the frost, they'll take the sun, they're UV stable, they'll look good for yunks.
13601 is the item number if you would like to go for that. It is a twin pack, so you will get a pair. If you want more than that, obviously just add to your basket as you need to.
>> Can you just tell me how long is a yonk?
Do you know?
>> My don't know, mate.
>> How many Does anybody know how many days? How many days are there in >> ages?
Um, >> yeah. How many years donkey's years?
Matt just said any go and ask a donkey.
We've also got our heavy duty planters for you as well. Now, this is the nest.
I think we need to remove the new heavy duty neester pots. Now, it is our it was one of our newest additions. Um we've added the green into the collection now.
But this um this is really cool because you're getting the three different sizes. So, we've got the >> 30 L, >> three of those. You're also going to get the 35 L and you will get one of the >> Watch you do it. Do you want some help?
>> I I kind of just want to watch you struggle.
>> Can you pull it off for me?
>> I can pull it off.
>> Thank you.
>> And you're going to get one of the 50 L heavy duty pots as well. Now, bear in mind, it nests together and sits inside each other, but I I know this is supposed to be a selling point. However, you will always have these in use.
You're never going to need to nest them, are you?
>> You won't. I've got loads of Look at that. Look at the white knuckles on there. I'm really giving these handles some serious jip. They're not coming off. They're staying on.
>> Actually, if I did this like for an hour every day.
>> Yeah, you'd you'd have you know, pecks of steel.
>> I'd actually Yeah. I wouldn't look like a jelly anymore, would I? Um Yeah. Super super strong. You got drainage holes in the bottom and in the sides on these as well. And you got that UV stability. So these are never going to go brittle and fracture and go into shards eventually.
Always going to stay malleable, tough, and strong. We've got a double up deal available on this as well. So if you have the need for 10 heavy duty pots, that would be two 50 L, two 35 L and six of the 30 L, you can do that for £15 more. So it's 25.47 47 your discount club price if you just want to get one lot but you can double up and you can get two lots of them. That's 10 heavy duty boxes in total. Uh 13681 is the item number if you would like to go for that. You will get free postage.
Remember to use your offer code YGTV2526.
>> You don't have to do the magicy thing.
That's my Toms and Cucumbers grown in me heavy duty pots.
>> Oh, hang on.
>> We're going to stick it on screen. Here we go.
>> I've used those for about four or five years now. There you That's my greenhouse there.
>> Oh, it's so organized.
>> I've got all me love and and that's the little trick I said to you about putting the bamboo canes across the top of the handles cable tying them on and then you tie string from the middle up to the top of the greenhouse and then you got nice sort of you know tor bits of twine for the plants to grow up.
>> So good.
>> That's where the cucumbers come from. I gave you this morning.
>> I got a cucumber. Adam's given me a cucumber.
>> I have handed them out all over the place.
I'm going to have more cucumbers you can shake a stick at soon. And if you I use these and they're brilliant.
>> There you go.
>> Thank you very much.
>> I've done your technical. Right. We have got the pre-planted apricot hanging bus.
Apricot. Hang on. Pre-planted hanging basket. Beonia apricot shades. That is a lot of words, but there you go. We have got those available for you if you would like to go for those. Um they come to you in the 25 cm hanging baskets.
They're green in color. You can have them as pots or you can have them as hanging baskets. 450048.
That is what they will look like when they have grown on. They are looking beautiful right now. They are flowering right now. That's it. Right now. Hello.
I'm here. Hello. H. That's what they're looking like. And you will get a pair of those. £18.68 is your delivered club price on those. 4550 is the item number.
Um, we are going to bring you back over to the favorites table and we're going to look first of all at the Agapanthus African blue. You're going to get three of these beauties.
And these are the big ones that we're talking about.
>> Or three blue tees cuz they're really really blue. These That's a stew joke. Um yeah, get to about a meter tall. Great big flowers on these as well. They like a really lovely shelter position. You can see in the picture there, they're growing at the base of a wall. They'll love that.
They'll love the heat that's reflected from the stonework or the brick work.
They love very good well- drained grally stony sandy kind of soils. They're not for very heavy wet clay soils. No. In that happy place, they'll they'll spread. They'll increase year on year.
They've got that fantastic fibrous root system that we're going to show you in a moment there. And they they don't even mind being potbound.
>> No, they love it. In fact, that's how you're going to encourage them to flower.
>> Yeah, they do. You can see, look, that one there. They're growing on that's probably Jersey, Jersey or Gernzie, somewhere like that. So even in those really poor sandy soils that drain super well, that's their happy place. And they'll bring in multitudes of bees and pollinating insects, you'll get a flowering period of like four to six weeks. They don't all like flour all at once. So they'll send up shoots over a different amount of time, giving you that flowering period over 46 weeks. F >> that's 426 weeks.
>> Oh, 426 weeks.
>> 56082 is the item number there. You can double up if you want to and get six of those pots. $1272 is your discount club price for the one um set. So, three pots in total. Right, we're going to move on to the haors. You have to plant your hellaors now so that you can get flowers this winter. If you wait and you plant them in winter and we will have them available then that's great. That's fine. But you're going to be waiting a bit longer to get the flowers. So, this is why we're bringing them to you at this stage. It is important to think ahead to the next seasons to make sure you have lovely color. Naomi has what? A hellaore flowering now. Well, that's crazy.
>> Yeah, but that happens these days, isn't it? The iPad somewhere. Everything's gone weird. You get things flour all out of sequence. I mean, most things this year are flaring between four to six weeks sooner than they should be. Like hibiscus, I've seen those starting to come into flower already. And normally, I'm saying they're the second half of the summer, but these these are sort of plants that give you color right in the depths of winter time. So, on those dark January, February, March days, >> look at these flowers. You're thinking they look a bit delicate. Surely they're a summer flowering plant. These aren't.
These will flower in the depths of winter when it's frosty, cold, wet, windy, raining heavy. They can grow in sun or shade. You can grow them under trees. They keep these leaves all the year through. So they always always have those lovely green leaves on even when they're not flowering. They'll bring in the very early pollinators. They'll spread. They'll form bigger and bigger clumps. And they'll lift your mood and they'll brighten your garden up when the snow drops, the very early crocuses, the akenites, all those sorts of bulbs are just starting to pop out. 480961 if you want to get the haore double queen mix. These are the double flowers.
They're absolutely stunning. Gorgeous color mix. Six of those plug plants and they're jumbo plug plants. Get them planted now so you get flowers this winter. £15.28 is your discount club price.
>> You know the irony on that one, Beex?
>> Hey, what >> the irony on that one?
>> Got a double up. That would be good, wouldn't it?
>> I know. The double queen with a double up.
>> A double up. Double queen.
>> Exactly. Right. Uh 480961 is the item number. Could the ASA garnet live in the Somerville planter? I just received my ASA today. Definitely.
>> Absolutely it can. For sure, 100%.
Right, let's move on to the beautiful hukura, which is called eternal flame.
And you can definitely see why because all right, look at this gorgeous foliage. This is what that foliage is going to mature into.
>> It does. It changes. Oh, by the way, we found there's a footballer called Hooker as well. Hooker. Yeah, yesterday.
Spelled slightly differently. Just a bit of useless trivia there for you. Um, but yeah, you can see as um the leaves on this actually sort of age, they get sort of darker and darker and darker. And you also get those really, really lovely flower stems as well. those little tiny flowers on there, which I might well, you know, I put them for a day or so, >> but I mean, the flowers are quite cute, but for me, they're like a bit like, you could have put a bit more effort in on the flower front. So, I I I kind of I just compared to the leaves, I think they're kind of a bit in the bit in the shade really. You know, some you turn up somewhere, >> we do gardening in our own way, >> you go on holiday, >> do it wrong, >> you know, you go on holiday somewhere and you you and your partner dress up really well in the evening for the restaurant. Yeah.
>> And then somebody walks in in a tracksuit and you think >> you think that sake like that's like the flowers on this they said the tracksuit part.
>> I disagree. I absolutely adore the flowers on huker. I think Adam's talking to but we all absolutely do garden in our own way. I like the flowers on hostas. I like the flowers on hukaras. I will leave them be. Uh you can do whatever you like.
>> Do you wear a tracksuit to a nice restaurant?
>> Yeah.
>> And flip flops and a bikini.
>> Bikini in the buffet. No. I would always, you know, cover up.
>> Well, yes, anything goes really.
>> Nobody needs to see that.
>> But the good thing about these particular plants is they're good.
They're good for shade. They're good for sun. They'll grow in dry soil or very damp soil. They keep their leaves pretty much all the year through. They'll take all the minus temperatures during the winter time. They'll take hot days in the summer. And they are really just as we say, plant them, love them, leave them. And that could be in the ground or they make really good container plants as well.
>> It's one of the best things. Plant it, leave it, love it. Barely any attention needed whatsoever. And quite versatile.
Sunny spot, shady spot. Doesn't seem to care. And you're getting those lovely color color changing leaves on there.
>> It's a big tick tick tick tick tick plant this one, isn't >> it? Right. Double up if you would like to. You can get six of those 9 cm pots because we've got some amazing extra savings if you want to double up. 561416 the item number for the beautiful eternal flame. I'm gonna sing it. Is this burning >> an eternal flame bangles?
>> Yay.
Well done. Right, let's move on to the um >> You sound like my home carer then.
>> Claim a familiar tune. Bring him back.
>> Well done, Adam. Well done.
>> I REMEMBER THAT ONE.
RIGHT. THIS IS THE BEAUTIFUL LITTLE rock stars collection. A budlier that stays compact. Surely there is no such thing.
>> There is. I've got it in my hand. It's a nice small one. And you can see look at the three colors as well. So you've got the purple, you've got the pink, and you've got the white. But also, you've got absolutely I can't say heaps of fragrance cuz you can't heap it, but I mean there's masses of fragrance on these.
>> So fragrant. There was a purple one that had a little tiny flower on a few weeks ago when I was talking about these. And even though the flower was half finished, the fragrance was delicious.
But if you get on a train, you're thinking, "Where's he going with this?
What's the train got to do with it?" You get on a train and you see all those huge buders at the side of the railways that grow into monsterized bushes. These are not those. Only that kind of is that >> definitely not. I mean, you could put three of these in a Somerville planter, no problem at all. Even a Davenport, you could probably put all three in. They will flower from midsummer right the way up until autumn. You can trim them back in the spring if they ever get too tall, which is unlikely. Uh and they will come back and flare on new growth as well.
And they take all the cold temperatures during the winter.
>> Amazing. Love it. For anybody that's got a small garden or is a container gardener or a balcony gardener, you can grow budier without it taking over the entirety of your garden. 51824 is the item number of the Budley Little Rockstars. It's brand new to us this year. So if you would like to grow your own budlia in the smallest of spaces or even in containers, here is how you do it. 51824 is the item number on the budier little rock stars. Now we did see a bit of Laura patalum earlier on in the 15 cm pot. Dark foliage, bright pink flowers.
Um pretty tough, resilient. It would it would appreciate being in a sheltered shady spot in the garden. And it is hardy down to probably about minus 5.
But if you pick that nice shelty shade, shely shaded, >> shelty shaded, >> a shelter shade. You know what I mean?
If you pick that area, it will definitely help to see it through the winter for you. Does like ericacious compost. So it does like that acid. So >> Gracious compost.
>> 510604 is the item number. If you would like to go for the um Laura patal and black pearl, we are going on to the salvia amistan which is in the 3 liter pot. And if you want something really gorgeous and dramatic, then definitely think about adding this one. It is a stunner.
Pollinators love it. It flowers later on in the summer going into autumn. Quite a long flowering period. Another one that is relatively hardy. do consider just maybe a mulch in winter uh just to help see it through and this will delight you for many years. I I think it was Monty Don I seem to remember having some of these in his west garden or something or other >> probably.
>> Probably uh 560516 is the item number.
If you'd like to go for the Aselvia Anastad in the 3 liter pot, double up.
You got extra savings. Make sure you're using your code YTV2526 to get those savings. Daphne perfume princess in the 13 cm pot. If you want winter fragrance, then there's only a few. There's a handful of plants to give you that gorgeous winter fragrance. A plethora of fragrance in the summertime.
But can you get it in winter? Yes, you can with the Daffhne Perfume Princess.
Beautiful clusters of these pale pink flowers starting out from quite deep pink buds. And this I mean mine was flowering I think it was from December.
I think it had beautiful fragrance December, January, February, and going into March. It was quite a long time. It does flower a little earlier than other daphnes and it does flower throughout the winter months. It's evergreen foliage as well ultimately and eventually it'll grow to roughly about a meter in height and it it will spread by that much as well, but it is a relatively slower growing one. It's not going to fill that gap instantly. So just bear that in mind. You could container grow this if you want to and it is ideally suited to a a slightly more shady spot in the garden, but not fussy on soil type. Mine is growing in clay soil and doing very well there. Uh 51038 is the item number for that one.
We've got some compact digitalis and fox gloves for you. These will grow to about 50 cm in height and they produce multiple stems from the base of the plant. Typically digitalis or fox gloves, you'll get one one stem tall, beautiful, stunning, but this will grow a little shorter and with those multiple flowers on there. And if you cut the the main stem down, it will help to encourage the extra stems to come up bigger. Don't be in a hurry to cut them down at the end of the season because they will produce seed pods and they will seed about for you. Technically a shortlived perennial plant, but once you've got them because they happily selfseed and create little pups at the base, you can always have them in your garden and pollinators absolutely adore them. You will get a collection here where you're getting three of them.
They're all in three liter pots as well.
These aren't baby plants. You're getting three liter pots in bloom and flower right now. And you can double up on those as well. And you can get six of them. Two of each color. 561431.
The most popular item on the show. It's got to be the mango tree. Yes, it is. H It is the beautiful mini grafted mango tree. Loads of you going for that one in the 1 and 12 liter pot. Uh £2549 your discount club price here. Now, it is a project. Please don't think I'm just going to stick this in my garden.
I'm going to grow mangoes. Mangoes are a tropical fruit. But it is possible with the right care and attention. Keep them warm. Keep them in that sunny space.
Give them winter protection. And you do have the chance of being able to grow your own mangoes, which I think is absolutely fascinating. Now, because um it is a tropical plant, it shouldn't drop its leaves, not all of them at one time anyway. It might replenish a few, but it is evergreen. And you do want to keep it nice and warm. We sort of Adam's saying on it as an average of around 15°. You know, it'll cope with slightly less occasionally, but yeah, you do want to keep it slightly warmer. But right now outside during the summer, introduce it to those sunny spots nice and gradually. Um, and you will see some lovely growth happening on there. And then hopefully very soon you can start messaging us saying, "I'm growing my first mango." Be very exciting. 30321 the item number. A couple of questions on that one. People were asking, "Can I keep it in a greenhouse over winter?"
Probably not. Your greenhouse is not going to be warm enough to be able to do that. So, it would almost become a house plant, wouldn't it? In winter.
>> Need to be in your house. It wouldn't survive in unless you heated your greenhouse that temperature. It needs to be indoors in the winter.
>> Okay. 3321 is the item number on that one. Do remember that we've got our amazing compost available for you. And an hello to you on YouTube. Uh what's asking can Oh, can we remind you why your compost is looking moldy at times again, please? I forgot what it was. It is It's basically good ingredients in there.
>> Myelium. That's what it is.
>> Yeah, it's re what it's telling you if and particular if you because I've had mushrooms grown in there in the past.
It's actually showing you that your compost has an amazing um you know biodiversity structure in there, isn't it?
>> It's like when we say to use the microisal fungi to plant things with, that's what's that's what's developing on the compost that microiser that that so that is um that that's a positive thing.
>> It is honestly because I think we we sometime oh mold got to get rid of it but but actually when it comes to the garden space it can be a good thing. It means there's good stuff going on in that compost. So don't panic an uh right the premium professional compost is available for you there as well the 110 L and you can get the 100 grams of soluble fertilizer with that deal 1208 if you want to though because somebody did ask about this earlier you can still get hold of the double up deal that we had a few weeks ago 125 is the item number and you need to use the code from a couple of weeks ago which is YTV2326 no postage to pay on any of your orders so you can check out a couple of times if you need to use this code this week's code for an order you're placing for this week's items. Do that and then you can place a separate order for the compost using that code from a couple of weeks ago. Right, we've got about 20 minutes left. I think we've managed to catch up with ourselves. Let's talk about the plants that we've got for you on this table. Now, of course, Namina fire. Come on. Everybody needs a fire power in their garden.
>> They do. And you have it all the year through as well cuz it's evergreen and it's ever red. Now, this one's not quite shown as much color as it will do because the new leaves come through a beautiful deep deep red color almost like a red rubbing.
>> This is sort of what happens to it at this time of year, isn't it? You know, you get the more green colors at this time of year and it changes color with the colder temperatures.
>> That's the nice thing about it. There you go, Beex. That's what you get in those colder temperatures. You get those really really sort of fiery shiny red colors. In the spring, the new growth comes to a red color as well. It's always chopping and changing, but you get this really, really lovely foliage 12 months of the year. It'll only get about knee height as well. So, it's a really, really compact plant. They can flower for you. They have little white flower clusters that can produce berries. Doesn't need pruning, trimming, or shaping. It will grow in full sun, part sun, or part shade. Sandy soils or clay soils. You can see the lovely red berries there.
>> Mine hasn't produced berries or flowers yet. Now, they do need to be just a little bit more mature, don't they, before they'll do that. And they can nandas in the UK can be a little bit reluctant to flower sometimes as well.
They they tend to flower more in places with longer kind of extended summers and warm autumn.
>> I've always said I don't care if it ever does or not. I mean, you know, I'm taking the mickey out of you. We're chopping flowers off foliage plants.
This is absolutely about foliage for me.
The colors, the texture, the sound, the movement.
>> That's why I'm doing that because it's got that lovely sound when the wind >> most beautiful plants. It's It's one of my favorite foliage plants in the garden.
>> And I can't I mean that discount club price there of £12.74 for something as big and as chunky as this. This is a whopping great big plant. That's at least a 3 L pot that's in. Really, really lovely. And the good thing is, and we're in the middle of June, we're coming up to the summer solstice. This will look just as gorgeous coming up to the winter solstice as well. And it's tough, resilient.
>> It was the feature in my garden one Christmas. I had it as the main plant in the center of the table outside because it was one of the things in my garden that just looked I'm talking around Christmas time. It was one of the items in my garden that absolutely looked at its best at that time of year. It It's such a beautiful plant and I barely other than admiring it. I pay no attention to it.
>> That's all you got to do. Just plant it, love it, leave it and and that's it. You don't need to trim. You don't need to stake it. You there's no dead heading to do. It will lose some leaves in the spring, sort of mid to late spring, early summer. And all it's doing then it's just shedding some of the really old leaves as it produces new leaves because although it's evergreen obviously the same leaves can't stand forever and ever. So once a year it will shed some of the more damaged uh lower down shadier leaves as it produces beautiful fresh foliage on top but it's never going to get big. I mean you could grow this easily in a pot. Something about the Davenport would be perfect size for it. Even some of like the sort of the Nantucket one or the chromaty kind of pots we do. They're all a good size for this plant. Okay, double up deal available for you. So, uh, what is it? Double up for10 pound more or 8 pound50 as a club member because you're always going to get that 15% discount from being a club member. Even when we're doubling up or taking money off, you still get 15% discount, which is why we always push you to become a club member. It's it's 10 quid to join.
That's your annual fee, oneoff payment for that year. And then you will continue to get that 15% discount every time you place an order. Plus, with shopping on YGTV, you get your free postage as well, which is brilliant.
Make sure you use the code, please, YTV2526.
Uh, now we've got a favorite for you in the potting shed. A plant that I always say every garden should own. And I genuinely believe that. I honestly think that every garden should have ceas. And every garden can have cenosis. Doesn't matter the size of the garden, does it?
>> No. Precisely. And this one's nice as well cuz in a really good full-on sunny position, this is a groundhugging kind of plant. In a shadier spot, it will tend to grow more upright. But you've got three plants here. Gorgeous plants in 9 cm pots. Oh my goodness me. Am I going to get >> It's going to be rooty. It >> look for proper root system on this. And these these grow really really quickly as well. So these are sort of fast growing plants. There we go. Um you can see their lovely gorgeous roots established in a pot or a container.
They love full sun. That's their happy place. They're very drought tolerant.
They can go down to minus 10 during the winter and they keep those super shiny leaves all the year through and it's doing what cenus do do. They have a main flowering period in May, that kind of time, but they will flower on and off in a smaller amount throughout the summer.
>> Yeah. And a second sort of flush of flowers you can get as we head towards autumn as the day lengths just get that little bit shorter again like they are in sort of May time. It can it can encourage them to do a secondary flowering. Now, this would be a great pack to collect if you want to create a hedge border, wouldn't it?
>> It'd be lovely. This it could be a nice sort of low-level open kind of border or hedge even if you want bringing loads and loads of pollinators. And the flowers are really nicely fragranced as well.
>> I love the fragrance.
>> Yeah. And and it's a proper blue color.
You can see they're not purple, not mauve. A real good good blue flowering plant. Blue is still a very unusual color in the garden ordinarily, but I'm going to take a little whiff of one of those flowers.
>> They do smell delightful. Yeah, it's quite a >> they do get absolutely covered very much like the picture here.
>> Genuinely, the whole plant gets completely covered. 51039 the item number. Double up available.
So, you can get six of these. And this is where I'm talking about if you want to create that hedge border cuz the each one of these can grow to what? 3 m >> and they will grow quick to that size as well.
>> Width we're talking. So, if you want to create that hedge border, you can definitely do it with a pack like this.
513 uh 511039 is the item number for that one. Double up for £10 more. Right, let's move on to Oh, I love these. Right, we're going to go on to two roses, both of which are by color. Um we're starting off with the beautiful raspberry ripple. So, a byolored rose.
>> Yeah, it's got that jumping jing, isn't it? This one. So, you get every flower is unique, is different. You never know exactly what you're going to get. And you can see on the blossoms here, some have got more red, some have got more white. Each petal is unique, different, individual. They're flurry. This is a flory bund type row. So you get those multitudes of flowers on the end of each stem. It's going to be less than a meter tall. About 80 90 to about a meter tall max. Grow it in a pot or a container or in the ground. It's pot grown. So, as usual, I know you get bored of saying this, but make sure the little knuckly bit or the union at the base is at least an inch to two inches below the final soil level. Super healthy foliage on these. And they're going to flower for you this year. This one's already got big buds on at the top. And I really like the fact that the new foliage comes through this coppery kind of red color and then it turns that really super healthy, lustrous green as well.
>> It's such a lovely plant. Honestly, I I just think it's amazing. not the most fragrant of the roses. Um, you know, it's not a Katherine Rose in fragrance, but I always say to you, there is a fragrance that comes from it. It's a lovely delicate rose fragrance and and when it's covered in roses, you will be able to smell it. What it lacks in its power of fragrance, it absolutely makes up for in its looks.
>> Definitely because it's that unique thing about the flower changing all the time. That's the great fun of it. You you grow a blue moon rose, you grow spitting everywhere, excuse me. You grow an iceberg rose, you you know every time the rose is going to be pure white or that sort of dark kind of purpley blue color. But with this, you obviously it's going to be either sort of red or white, but you never know the proportions of the color on each flower, which adds to the fun, the joy of it.
>> Yeah, definitely. All right, that one is the raspberry ripple rose. £5 saving there. £16.99 for a potted rose from Harkness Roses as well. That's amazing.
Um, and we've also got its brother or sister or whatever. Um, this one's called Oranges and Lemons. Uh, same same story here. Basically, it's a byolored rose. Uh, but this one's actually got a flower on it as well, >> couldn't it? To see it in the flesh.
Look at that. Look at that.
>> Isn't that incredible, Beex? I mean, just amazing. And it could have a flower next to it that will be completely different. I've even seen on some of these roses one half of the flower pretty much one color and the other half of the flower pretty much the other color. That's so cool.
>> It is cool, isn't it? I mean, it's this just really, really fun. And what basically what we said about the raspberry ripple applies to this as well. It's not going to get more than about a meter tall. You can grow it in a pot or a container. Hartness. Always breed roses that have got very super healthy foliage as well. Good disease resistance built into these roses.
They'll repeat flour. What they doing, Matt?
>> They'll repeat flour.
>> They'll repeat flower for you, which is good. So, you keep getting those flushes of flower from midsummer all the way through till autumn. Dead head. That's always important. By that we mean once the sort of head of flowers has gone over, go down the stem to about the width of something like a knitting needle width thereabouts. Cut just above an outward- facing leaf. A new shoot will come through and that will give you more flowers. And then you just wait to see what kind of color proportion you're going to get on those beautiful flowers.
>> Perfectly byolored. And then you go up and look, it's more yellow than it is orange. I I I just think it's dead interesting.
>> They are. They're great. And I think actually if you had space for it, these next to each other, the the the raspberry ripple and the orange and lemons right next to each other, that would be really cool, wouldn't it?
>> There's one thing I'm going to look into though.
>> What's that?
>> On one of the labels, it's papina. On the other label, it's pagino.
>> It's like they're kind of male and female or something.
>> Yeah, we'll have to check.
>> Have to check that out. Just >> interesting. Uh, by the way, that is real.
>> It is.
>> That's real.
>> That's not AI.
>> Not AI. That is >> Oh, don't don't don't don't get too scrunchy. Don't want a chameleia moment.
>> It's pretty, isn't it? I want to stick my nose in it.
>> I'm coming round. I'm coming round.
>> It's lovely.
>> Yeah, it's delicate. It's lovely, but it's a but it's a delicate fragrance.
So, it's got absolute beauty and that gorgeous delicate fragrance that goes with it. Would be great as a cut flower as well. I mean, that would if you got loads of those. A bouquet of those.
>> That would look amazing, wouldn't it?
>> If you had a bouquet of the raspberry ripple and the lemon and oranges and lemons together.
>> Nice.
>> All right. Um, it is flora bund by the way. Those two roses that we've been talking about there. So, clusters of roses that you will be getting on those particular ones. Uh, that one is the roses, oranges, uh, rose oranges and lemons. 780244 the item number and six $16.99 for a potted rose. That's a bargain. I'm going in.
It's a sniff off.
>> Oh, she smells so good.
>> Does smell good.
>> Oh, wow.
>> I bet she smells that good.
>> I'd like to get my pillows to smell like that. So, I >> Yeah, Could you Do you use that sort of bed mist?
>> No, I don't. But I would if it smelled like that.
>> Yeah, I use a lavender one.
>> I love the smell of that. That's gorgeous. Right. Right. I want to I just want to bring these roses um forward for you because I want to show you um because we've got a sort of journey here for you. That's how the bud starts out or Oh, there. But there's a green bud somewhere. Hang on.
I can see it on the screen, but I can't.
It's the other rose. That doesn't belong to that rose. That belongs to the orange.
>> That color threw me as I was like, what are you talking about?
>> Where is it?
>> All right. So, that one is the bird as it starts out. Almost red color. It's a very very deep pink. And then look how perfect that is as the rose starts opening. And then as it goes through the stages and opens up to reveal the stonment in the center which is going to bring the pollinators into the garden.
And you will not be able to stay away from that rose. You won't you won't be able to stop. Honestly, you've seen what Adam and I are like. We we're we're obsessed.
>> And look at the foliage. Honestly, we promise you 100% we have not put leaf shine >> on that rose. That is the natural luster and sheen of the leaves on these roses.
Harkness really pride themselves on creating roses that have got vigor and strength not only from the flower and the fragrance but in the foliage as well disease resistance. They stopped using fungicides and pesticides many many years ago and they just trial thousands and thousands of roses for natural resistance until eventually >> they find one that does sort of withstand all those horrible pests and things that can affect roses. And each one of these roses you buy as well there'll be a5 uh donation donation to the Royal Mden Hospital as well.
>> All right, that's it. I'm getting one.
I've decided I absolutely need the Katherine Rose. I will find a space for that. I hope you all feel very much the same. Seriously, you need that gorgeous rose in your garden. It is absolutely beautiful. Uh right, 780034 is the item number if you would like to go for it. It's in the 3 L pot and it includes that £5 charitable donation as well. £246.
No. Yeah. 24.64 is the price for that gorgeous Katherine Rose for you there.
Uh Naomi says I should buy this for um next door. Her name's Katherine. That would be a lovely gift for you to give them. Um, I like green buds and I cannot lie.
You are the brothers. No. Uh, right. I was looking for you on eBay. How do I order the ice cream shop? I have no idea. Ice cream shop. SRB2937.
How do I order the ice cream shop? I Are you in the right place? We talk about plants here. Um, please let me know if uh I can help in any way. Right, the meteor would look good with the oranges and lemons. I agree with you, Naomi. Uh, I need to buy another oranges and lemons and the raspberry ripple. Oh, more boo casualties. Oh, bless you. Right, do jump into the chat if you want to ask any quick uh last minute questions. Most um happy to answer those. We didn't get round to showing those other pictures.
Can we do it quick? We got a few minutes. Um Edward, so Harry and Henry have taken over the stroch. What does that mean? Oh, I'm not connected. Gosh.
Gosh darn it. I was gonna say something else and I stopped myself. Um, there we go. Look, hang on. Uh, lovely, lovely border here. But this is what I mean by home.
>> Oh, bless.
>> Hello.
>> A look at that. Oh, what a nice little home to be living in.
>> I think I would like a cat.
>> Oh, I'd like one of them to like sleep in in the evening. They do adult size.
Isn't that lovely?
>> Thank you for send pictures. Um, right.
So, uh, Nathan, East Coast Tropical, here you go. Are you all ready to get jealous? Here we go. Beautiful. Fatsia looking stunning.
>> Whoa, look at this.
>> Oh, look at this.
>> Need to go and see this garden.
>> Oh. Oh my goodness me.
>> It's just heavenly.
>> Look at this. That's >> a fairy friend.
>> A, >> it's just so lush and tropical looking and absolutely gorgeous. That's my hookahex on the right. I think that's all that one. Yeah. Um Yeah, that's what mine looks like. Beautiful.
>> Thank you, Nathan. We love seeing your garden, honestly. Uh Penny, good afternoon. All my front garden today.
Just one of my hanging baskets. Back garden being a bit neglected. Been looking after these puppies and their mom. Four weeks old. Puppies. Puppies.
Look at these.
>> Oh.
>> Oh, Penny.
>> Oh, I bet they smell love. I love the smell of puppies. Smell like digestive biscuits and we at the same time. It's such a lovely smell.
>> So nice.
>> Oh, Penny.
>> Limey Penny, you have seriously seriously gone for it there. Look at that. That is amazing.
>> Look at it.
>> That looks so cool.
>> That is so colorful.
>> I love the the kind of hard landscaping of the rocks and then all the soft flowers in between.
>> It's kind of got a really beachy coastal kind of feel to it. That is awesome. And that say Matt just said about the cord lines at the background. They just really really finish it off. Wonder. You can see um how they make the little stems as well cuz we always say the leaves die off and you get that like false kind of palm tree look. There you go. That's what they're doing.
>> Oh, Penny, that looks ace. I love it. I love it. Let's have one more. Oh, and there's your hanging baskets. Looking beautiful.
>> Oh, that's like the is that the super cascade ones that you grow?
>> Super cascade. Super cascades.
>> The big big chunky ones. and in the easy fill hanging baskets as well. That's what I've just cuz I had one hanging basket that failed so I replanted with the super cascade. Um as just yesterday I did it. Uh Dave um sent to customer service but meant YGTV. Okay. Uh hold on.
Uh oh Dave, I don't uh I'm going to have to come back to that. There's too much information. I can't quite see. Oh, here we go. Dave, I get it. Pictures here.
Thank you. Uh Mojo Berry plant uh plants from you and other plants from you. That is the lifesteria, isn't it?
>> It is. Yeah. Oh, we haven't seen that this year, have we?
>> We haven't. We need to dig that one out again.
>> Yeah. Yeah, we haven't seen that one recently.
>> Beautiful foliage on there.
There's a little shark on the floor.
Yeah. Brilliant. Uh let's get keep going.
>> Is it mommy shark or baby shark or daddy shark?
>> Is that the mojo berry?
>> Mojo berry. And it's got mojo berries on as well.
>> Look at that.
I've never eaten a mojo berry.
>> I've got the mojo berry, but yeah, mine's only only dinky at the moment.
It's his first year.
>> When you get fruits, I'd like to try.
>> I don't think I've ever eaten one.
>> Well, that's a that's a cucumber.
>> Oh, yes. Look, there they are. Little cucumbers growing.
>> A quick snack or >> I need to grow cucumbers. Next year I'll do some cucumbers. I've never grown cucumbers.
>> They're really easy to grow.
>> I'm going to do it next year.
>> Oh, look at what's going on over here.
So much going on. You got your nephas in the background.
>> Are they Are they potatoes down at the front?
>> They look a bit potatoish foliage, don't they?
>> Yay. Lots going on.
>> I just I spotted that. Look.
>> Yes.
>> It's probably It's 11 month out of 12 still flowering.
They do just keep going, don't they?
Flour and flower and flower and flower.
>> Ah, Dave, thank you so much. I see what happens. You sent the pictures to us, but you sent it to customer services and then customer services come back saying it it's looking great. what you're talking about. I see what's happened there, Dave. H Thank you everybody. We did manage to show all of those pictures. Um I didn't want to miss anybody out because obviously we ask you to send us pictures and then I'm always really sad if we don't actually get round to um showing them as well. Um right, so uh we're just going to finish off, I think, with the beautiful mango tree that we've got for you. It's been our most popular item on the show today.
We definitely predicted that. We thought it would be. It's something a bit new and a bit interesting.
>> Definitely. I mean, it's a project plant, but if you're dedicated, if you can give it the right conditions, get it to flower, the flowers are lovely.
They're white, they're fragrant, it's self-fertile in its happy place, it will produce your own homegrown mangoes.
Imagine that. I mean, you don't have to go and pay a fortune for them from the supermarket. They don't have to be imported from the other side of the planet. You could experience the flavor of your own mangoes in your own home.
>> You definitely can. 3 0321. Ah, SRB 2937. He meant the ripple colored or she they meant the ripple colored roses.
Raspberry ripple like an ice cream.
Sorry, I didn't quite get that. Um, if you want to place your order, by the way, all you have to do is make a note of the item number. Um, and then you can go to our website. All the details you need are on the screen really. So, you go to ugarden.com. If you click on the live now button, if you're on a PC, look, it's there. If you're on a phone or a tablet, it might be under the menu button. But if you find the live now section, you can then scroll down and you can see all of the items that are in the YGTV show and that's where you can then find the Raspberry Ripple. You can then add that to your basket. Go through to your basket and that's where you can then check out now to get the savings that we are talking about. We do have an offer code that's on screen. Um, so this week's offer code is YTV2526.
So, what you need to do is make sure that you're putting the correct code into the offer code bit there. And that will then give you the savings and the prices that we've been showing you on the screen. And that's where you can then check out. You can join the club today and save an extra £3. Cost you £10 to join, but you get 15% discount off the pots, the compost um and the plants that we show you in the potting shed and on the website. But do remember that YGTV items have free postage. If you shop the rest of the website, you will pay a postage cost, which is why we encourage you to watch us here on YGTV.
either live on a Thursday afternoon or a Sunday morning or you can watch these shows on catch up anytime you like on um YouTube on Facebook and via our website uggarden.com. I hope I gave you all the information you need.
>> This man's got to go.
>> I know we're going to go now.
>> Love you all lots. Thank you so much for joining us. I will be back on Sunday at I think it's either 10 or 11 o'clock. I can never remember the time. But I'll be here with you on Sunday. If you want to watch Adam, he will be up in 1 hour on Tik Tok if you're a Tik Tok >> after the chicken and cucumber sandwiches.
>> We'll see you all very soon. Bye >> bye now.
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