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Posted (edited)
On 22/04/2025 at 11:22, HeadNun said:

The Secret Garden is great and delivers - excellent customer service and advice. I think the Nunhead Gardener is way too expensive and not sure they really know their stuff. 

I hate to admit that I go online for plants but Gardening Express is just brilliant - great value for money (I used to use Crocus, which is extortionate and so many of their plants didn't make it) and their plants have grown like crazy since I got them. 

Yes, I have had bad experiences with plants from  Crocus in the past.

I will have a look at Gardening Express, but I am wary about buying plants online, particularly if they use Royal Mail and might now take ages to actually arrive.

ETA: I've just looked at Gardening Express, and I'm very impressed by the fact that they have a 5 year guarantee for perennial plants. That's extraordinary.

I will definitely investigate further!

Edited by Sue

It's useful to see these recommendations for local gardening centres.

Wondering if anyone has used the RHS online plant shop, and if you'd recommend that? 

 

Currently trying to choose some new plants for our small garden! 

I got some good euphorbia from Croxted Road the other day. I had asked for them a previous week, and they said they'd put some aside for me when they got some in. They did and gave me a call. It seemed a good service with friendly staff. 

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Posted (edited)
41 minutes ago, Katherty said:

It's useful to see these recommendations for local gardening centres.

Wondering if anyone has used the RHS online plant shop, and if you'd recommend that? 

 

Currently trying to choose some new plants for our small garden! 

I got some good euphorbia from Croxted Road the other day. I had asked for them a previous week, and they said they'd put some aside for me when they got some in. They did and gave me a call. It seemed a good service with friendly staff. 

I haven't used the RHS online shop, however to the best of my knowledge none of the RHS gardens such as Wisley have a nursery (though they may sell plants there) , so whatever plants the RHS are selling will be grown elsewhere.

It might be worth trying to find out where they get their retail plants from (it could be several different places, eg one for perennials, one for shrubs) and then googling reviews of those nurseries.

I may be wrong, but I'm  not convinced that buying from the RHS necessarily ensures a good plant. I once bought a perennial wallflower (Bowles Mauve) from Kew (not RHS, but you would expect good quality)  which looked fine when I bought it, but didn't last long.

I don't think it was due to my neglect, but who knows. It was in a large pot by my front door, where it got a lot of sun, so I have no idea what went wrong.

Thanks for the recommendation for Croxted Road. I wonder if they can suggest some plants which I can put in the area  under my bird feeders to deter the wood pigeons, who have transformed a large part of my very small garden into bare earth, and destroyed some treasured plants which I had had for years.

Btw I'm sure you know this, but be very careful with Euphorbias. If you get any sap on your skin and it is exposed to sunlight, you will get an absolutely massive blister.

I speak from past experience 😭

 

Edited by Sue
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On 19/04/2025 at 17:13, malumbu said:

Surprised nobody has recommended Peckham wildlife centre:  https://www.wildlondon.org.uk/nature-reserves/centre-for-wildlife-gardening

Very close.

Also the greenhouses at Brockwell Park Greenhouse, Google it, another wildlife garden, open some weekends.

Thumbs up to both!

On 19/04/2025 at 14:46, Sue said:

Now that we have sadly lost several of the local and localish  places to buy plants, can anybody recommend a good nursery which is reasonably near and has a good selection of shrubs?

Or alternatively a good place to buy plants online (though  I would rather see what I am buying, as I've had bad experiences in the past when buying plants online).

I need something urgently which is evergreen and prickly and will grow quickly to fill a shady  corner space at the back of my garden where fences have become bare and cats are climbing  over and waiting for birds to come to the feeders 😭

I'm thinking a Mahonia. It doesn't actually have thorns, but the leaves are prickly.

Alternatively, is there some other way of deterring the cats without harming them (I like cats!) I don't want to use anything like spikes or barbed wire.

If this is in the wrong section, admin, please move!

I'm fond of Alexandra Nurseries in Penge

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If you want a small prickly evergreen for shade I would recommend Ruscus aculeatus. Unlike Pyracantha, which grows big and is unpleasant to prune, Ruscus only grows to a metre and it will grow in very dark dry shade where almost nothing else does. It is viciously spiny and has very good  red berries in winter.  Berberis darwinii and Berberis julianae are two good evergreen Berberis that will grow in partial shade. I usually order from Burncoose but I have always had a good service from Crocus. 

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We go to Coolings garden centre which is'nt exactly local its near Bromley but they do deliver.

Since Shannons closed we've been going there-its HUGE good knowledgeable staff and not overpriced.

every plant we've purchased from them has done really well-AND theres a lovely pub nearby!

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