Garden Centers London
This page provides useful content and local businesses that can help with your search for Garden Centers. You will find helpful, informative articles about Garden Centers, including "Basic groups of plants". You will also find local businesses that provide the products or services that you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in London that will answer all of your questions about Garden Centers.
Garden Print Centre Ltd
020 74050516
4 Lamp Office Court
London
Garden Print Centre Ltd
020 74050516
4 Lamp Office Court
London GB.WC1N3NF
Data Provided by:
Covent Garden Christian Centre
020 72401599
34 Neal Street
London
Covent Garden Christian Centre
020 72401599
34 Neal Street
London GB.WC2H9PS
Data Provided by:
Cotswold Garden Centre Ltd
020 76363021
19 Devonshire Street
London
Cotswold Garden Centre Ltd
020 76363021
19 Devonshire Street
London GB.W1G7AF
Data Provided by:
North One
020 79233553
25 Englefield Road
London
North One
020 79233553
25 Englefield Road
London GB.N14EU
Data Provided by:
Manor Gardens Centre
020 72723404
6-9 Manor Gardens
London
Manor Gardens Centre
020 72723404
6-9 Manor Gardens
London GB.N76LA
Data Provided by:
Covent Garden Dragon Hall Trust
020 74047274
17 Stukeley Street
London
Covent Garden Dragon Hall Trust
020 74047274
17 Stukeley Street
London GB.WC2B5LT
Data Provided by:
Boma Garden Centre
020 72844999
Islip Street
London
Boma Garden Centre
020 72844999
Islip Street
London GB.NW52DJ
Data Provided by:
Camden Garden Centre
020 73877080
2-2A Barker Drive
London
Camden Garden Centre
020 73877080
2-2A Barker Drive
London GB.NW10JW
Data Provided by:
Rainbow Nursery
020 74853861
St Benets Church Hall
London
Rainbow Nursery
020 74853861
St Benets Church Hall
London GB.NW52HY
Data Provided by:
Lillington Gardens Community Centre
020 78347975
Morgan House
London
Lillington Gardens Community Centre
020 78347975
Morgan House
London GB.SW1V2LF
Data Provided by:
Data Provided by:
Basic groups of plants An understanding of the basic plant groups is important for the new gardener. If you have tended little more than a windox in your post divorce life then get growing with our simple guide. Annuals: Grow, flower, set seed and die within one season. Many varieties can be raised easily and cheaply from seeds or can be bought as immature seedlings in plugs or trays. They are great for creating instant effect and adding colour to your garden or planted in containers which you can place around a patio or on a veranda. Marigolds, poppies, nasturtiums and cornflowers can be sown straight into the soil where they are meant to flower. Growing annuals is a great way of introducing children to gardening and gives you the option of changing the layout and colour scheme of your garden every year Biennials: Take two years to grow from seed. Biennials such as foxgloves and angelica flower and set seed in the second year before they die. Perennials: Non woody flowering plants that can live for several years and die down in the winter. They can be propagated in a variety of ways but most can be grown from seeds or cuttings. Many will flower in their first year of growth but others need a couple of years to get established. Shrubs: Woody plants, smaller than trees, with a short stem and branches near the ground. There are a huge variety of shrubs available and a walk around your local garden centre or nursery will give you some idea of just how many there are. Some shrubs are grown for their flowers, some for their foliage and some, like lavender for their deliciously fragrant leaves and flower spikes. Trees: The definition of a tree is this; a woody plant that has, usually, a well defined trunk or stem with branches above it. Take great care when you plant a tree in your garden that it is not going to grow thirty foot high and block out the light from you, or your neighbours’ windows or interfere with walls or other structures. Do your homework before you buy, there are lots of varieties suitable for small gardens and if space is not an issue then you really will be spoilt for choice. Fruit trees grown on dwarf root stocks will give you blossom in the spring and something delicious to eat later in the year. Climbers: Plants with soft stems that rely on something else for support – another plant, a wall or a trellis for example. Some climb by means of curling a leaf around something, others by producing aerial roots that support the plant as it grows or that are self clinging using suckering pads. Some of the best loved climbers include the huge variety of clematis, rambling and climbing roses and honeysuckles. Bulbs: We are all familiar with those staples of the spring garden, narcissi and tulips. A bulb is basically an organ for storage which consists mostly of fleshy scales and swollen modified leaf bases on a much reduced stem. Most bulb plants have a dor... |
Click here to read more from My Life After Divorce