Press – New Word Plants https://new-worldplants.com Where the future is growing Sun, 02 Mar 2025 15:44:57 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://new-worldplants.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/cropped-NWP-Favicon-image-32x32.jpg Press – New Word Plants https://new-worldplants.com 32 32 Hort Week Press announcement NWP – 9th Nov 2022 https://new-worldplants.com/hort-week-press-announcement-nwp-9th-nov-2022/ Sun, 13 Nov 2022 14:42:03 +0000 https://new-worldplants.com/?p=4001

Hort Week Press announcement NWP - 9th Nov 2022

Walter Blom Plants BV acquires the sales rights to New World Plants genetics

9 November 2022

Geum Pink Petticoats flowers close

Geum Pink Petticoats

New World Plants have sold their young plant division part of the business to Walter Blom Plants in Holland with the aim to offer a better and more efficient service to its existing customers in the UK following the recent changes of plant importation following Brexit.

The directors Rod and Kym Richards believe this is a vital step in protecting the efficiency and continuity of new plant introductions in the UK as well as making available many of its new plants into Europe given the successful existing network that Walter Blom plants already has.

Netherlands ever since, running his own company Walter Blom Plants BV since 2010. The business mainly supplies starter material of hardy herbaceous perennials to professional growers and mail order in the UK as well as across Europe, the USA and Asia.

Contacts: Walter Blom Plants BV : Veenenburgerlaan 108A, 2182 DC Hillegom, The Netherlands. Telephone +31 23 7410070.
E-mail info@walterblom.nl. Contact Stephen Page via either +31 6 53588940 or stephen@walterblom.nl.
For United Kingdom: Peter Collins: peter@botanicsinternational.co.uk

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New World Plants Ltd.
White Cottage
Main Street
Styrrup
South Yorkshire
DN11 8NB - UK

CONTACT

Please note we are solely a wholesale supplier and regret that we can only respond to trade enquiries.

PLANT BREEDING AND DEVELOPMENT

Phone: (+44) (0) 1568 611521
email: plant.information@new-worldplants.com

YOUNG PLANT SALES & TC SUPPLY

Phone: (+31) 6 53588940
email: stephen@walterblom.nl

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NWP’s perspective on Covid 19 https://new-worldplants.com/nwps-perspective-on-covid-19/ Wed, 01 Jul 2020 06:10:00 +0000 https://new-worldplants.com/?p=3765

Coronavirus is killing our industry as well as our lives...

NWP's Perspective on Covid 19.

Covid-19

Background vector created by Harryarts - www.freepik.com

There have been too many things said about Covid 19 in relation to our industry and it’s not my purpose to be controversial here however from an NWP perspective this has had serious consequences for everyone which at this time seems to have changed from being a very negative experience to a more confident and dramatic change of events.

 

In March it started with so many customers cancelling booked orders as either space or cash OR nerves took precedent with owners making forced decisions over the plant buyers. This caused mayhem for everyone involved but a number of people took a more optimistic view and stayed glued to the helm and as a result this has paid off now. At first panic set in and opening emails became a daily routine of hesitation.

This has taught us many things in particular who of our customer base became the ‘loyal’ stalwarts and who seemed to be not interested in discussion as to a way forward. It was our view that if people were in lock down then there were only two things you could do (apart from play snakes and ladders) and that was DIY or Gardening. Neither seemed an option at first as the government did not permit these places to remain open. As a result, so many plants either did not get produced or were dumped or did not have homes to go to. Suppliers were also varied in their response to us with some imposing cancellation charges, whilst customers made it clear these would not be accepted and clearly if we wanted to trade in 2021 this would be a bad move on our part.

This has been possibly the most challenging season that I can recall in living memory, despite centres being reopened now, the damage has already been done with significant plants dumped and revenues lost. The amount of extra work in either re selling product or reducing/changing orders was in itself a mammoth task but all so necessary. With pressure mounting on all sides and from emails and phone calls there has been, and still is with some outfits, a heaviness in conversations that at times is overwhelming. Something so much more than a hectic season!

NWP worked hard at campaigning alongside other growers with the NFU and to local MP’s, the latter being less helpful and not so supportive as perhaps they could have been. The end result was that the government did accept the need for garden centres to open, by which time people had been used to social distancing. The explosion of trade that followed and still goes on as I write this, has been utterly staggering. Our belief that this was an opportunity for less enthusiastic gardeners to improve their outside space for once and that online sales whilst the only option prior to reopening could go crazy for plants in the flesh as well as the surge for fruit and vegetables. It is my belief that this trend will stay strong going forwards and we will have recruited more conversions to gardening.

The number of our customers who have reported in recent weeks demands for product far above their expectations and report on breaking records week after week is an encouraging relief. This however for us does not help with the loss and disposal of young plants that needed to be supplied in wks. 14 onwards. We have to wait with bated breath to see how customers will react to ordering for next season and if insight to the future will shed any light. Again so many factors such as what will happen to crops like Bergenia unsold on the ground, will they hold or will they get potted up and as such will we see odd pot sizes appearing next season for the first time in order to keep plants looking healthy? 4 or 5 Lit Bergenia perhaps? Will there be another major lockdown this autumn which would potentially put a serious ‘chill’ on orders being booked for next season and how do we apply perhaps different terms and conditions after the lessons learnt.

One thing for sure is that people do want to garden and optimise their private space which with this year’s weather has influenced the surge greatly. If we are to learn from this is that we need to pull together to cooperate more by real conversation and not email perhaps, and sharing the new plans being developed; and to take more chances knowing so many have no product to sell right now because they cancelled and if they could only hold their breath a bit longer could participate in this record-breaking time now and claw back those losses in early spring. We have full admiration for those who took on the entrepreneur spirit and examined ways to be creative and do what they could to survive such as the ‘plants for people scheme’.  As someone who has been passionate about plants I have smiled as many nurseries have rapidly developed an on line presence which could continue to be improved in the winter months and I believe have the opportunity to sell a wider range of plant varieties than they would otherwise dreamed of stocking! Now is the time to rekindle a 'Plantsman Presence' and  cash in on the sensational demand for variety that only previously small private nurseries seem to offer. I hope that people do not forget these lessons and remain optimistic for 2021 and reinvent themselves from old traditional methods of doing business. We might be bruised from this season but with a spirit of kindness and confidence and trailer loads of cooperation we might live to fight another day. I penned this note during the early period of campaigning to get garden centres re opened, which I believe bears some reality...

Gardens are special peaceful spaces with restorative qualities that can work wonders when we are stressed and under pressure. They provide a sanctuary for all things nature and an environment to relax , entertain and enjoy as well as sharing with our friends. The physical act of gardening  provides exercise and a mental stimulus that is useful for our bodies. The additional benefits and rewards are numerous resulting in reaping a harvest of fruit, vegetables and flowers to be enjoyed within the home. A place to educate our children and encourage them to become our future custodians of our gardens and parks.

Have a read of this article from the NFU (Lorna Mayberry) which appeared in the ‘Countryside magazine July 2020’ when interviews were taken from a number of people in the industry right in the peak of things.

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New World Plants Ltd.
White Cottage
Main Street
Styrrup
South Yorkshire
DN11 8NB - UK

CONTACT

Please note we are solely a wholesale supplier and regret that we can only respond to trade enquiries.

PLANT BREEDING AND DEVELOPMENT

Phone: (+44) (0) 1568 611521
email: plant.information@new-worldplants.com

YOUNG PLANT SALES & TC SUPPLY

Phone: (+31) 6 53588940
email: stephen@walterblom.nl

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NFU Countryside July 2020 – Covid 19 https://new-worldplants.com/nfu-countryside-july-2020-covid-19/ Sun, 28 Jun 2020 05:54:57 +0000 https://new-worldplants.com/?p=3762

NFU Countryside July 2020 - Covid 19

NFU-Covid

Shutterstock

As garden centres re-open after weeks of shutdown due to Covid-19, Lorna Maybery looks at what this means for both businesses and customers

WHEN THE GOVERNMENT announced a couple of weeks ago that garden centres could re-open, there was a collective sigh of relief, not just from the businesses themselves, but also from a nation with time of its hands and a pressing need for seasonal plants.

With flowers and plants back on the shopping list, here’s how some businesses have coped with the Covid-19 shut-down and the challenges of re-opening once more.

Maytree Garden Centre and Nursery

Brian May, who owns Maytree Nursery and Garden Centre near Faversham, Kent, said when they were forced to close the nursery they kept two staff in place to water and nurture the plants, but some bedding plants had to be thrown away.

“We grow 20,000 of our own perennials and most of these were fine, but we did suffer a significant financial loss and cancelled a couple of orders for 7,400 plugs and 9,000 geraniums,” says Brian.

During March and April, Brian and his chief staff member Neil Etheridge set up an email and phone-in ordering system for customers and made local deliveries, which they had never done before.

“Luckily, this kept us afloat and we couldn’t keep up with the orders,” he says. He adds that the government decision to allow the re-opening of his business was absolutely critical.

“Customers have been saying how wonderful it is to have the garden centre open again,” he adds, “and the car park has been full.”

Customers are also coping well with the social distancing measures, he says. There’s a clear entrance and exit and customers are asked to go down each isle while staying two metres apart.

 

The two metre distancing rule is also in place when queuing to pay and there are clear lines marked on the ground to help with this.

Visitors are told to wait to be called to the checkout, where staff on the tills wear gloves and face masks, and everyone is also being asked to pay by card.

Trolley handles are wiped with disinfectant and always returned to the same place to ensure cleaning after each use, and hand sanitiser is available to all.

“Life almost feels normal, and everyone was smiling and happy,” says Brian.

NFU-Hilliers

Hillier Garden Centres

Hillier Garden Centres, which are situated throughout the south of the UK, have implemented two-metre social distancing, added sanitiser stations, a one-way system and card payments only. It has been challenging, says director of Hillier Garden Centres, Chris Francis, but staff are working hard to ensure customer safety and visitors are happy to be able to browse plants once more.

“We are pleased with how our re-opening is going,” says Chris. “Customer feedback has been very positive about the new social distancing measures, with queuing to enter and one-way systems around the garden centres, as well as many other new measures.

“The teams have all been working extremely hard to ensure social distancing and make sure all staff and customers are safe at all times. Safety has to be the top priority, so it’s been really great to see reviews and hear direct from customers on how safe they have felt shopping with Hillier.

“Gardening plays such a vital role in both our physical and mental health and wellbeing, we know how important it is for our customers to keep active and enjoy their outdoor space at this time. It’s wonderful to see so many of them able to do this again safely.”

Hartley’s Nurseries

Ann-Louise Hartley, who runs Hartley’s Nurseries in Merseyside with her husband Bill, says that having an existing online shop enabled them to cope with the closure of their business better than some.

“We had a web shop mainly for flowers and bouquets, but had never put our plants online,” says Ann-Louise. “But the night we were told to close, my daughter Annabel and I sat up and loaded our web shop with our own grown plants.

“We had greenhouses full of 10,000 plants, so it was devastating; what were we going to do with all these plants? We kept one florist with us, and then, next day, as the orders flooded in, we needed more, so called another worker in. We didn’t have a driver and realised taxi drivers were suffering badly, so I rang a taxi driver I knew and said, do you want to drive our van? Eventually, we were filling four vans every day and delivering in a 20-mile radius around the Liverpool area.

“It’s calming down now as we have re-opened, but that has brought new challenges. Everyone was so grateful when we opened. There was a lot to do, though, to prepare. We put up Perspex screens around the tills, set up a one-way system, taped up the floor, and built a queuing system outside.

“We have a man on the door regulating people through, trolleys need to be cleaned and handles wiped, so it’s quite a job.

“There’s no moaning from customers about having to queue, but some people haven’t quite understood the two-metre rule. People are so pleased to see you that they want to chat, which is lovely but I find myself backing away from people as they get too close. Some are being really careful, and others don’t seem bothered at all!”

 

 

A FAMILY AFFAIR:  The Hartley family from left, Annabel, Bill, Ann-Louise and Tom, who is a furloughed Lancashire county cricket player happy to help out the family business

New World Plants

Although garden centres are now open, those businesses at the start of the plant supply chain are finding it challenging to get back up and running.

Rod Richards is managing director of New World Plants, which supplies young plants to wholesalers. He joined the NFU campaign to get garden centres re-opened, saying: “If ever there was a time in our country to turn neglected run-down gardens into something beautiful and enhance existing gardens in the same way – while we have time on our hands – it’s now.”

And although he is relieved garden centres have reopened, he says the plants he has ordered have nowhere to go as wholesalers don’t have the space for more stock.

“We breed and introduce new varieties of plants and supply the wholesale growers, who grow them on, and ultimately sell them to garden centres,” he explains.

“Most wholesale nurseries would have given us orders last September to supply them in spring with these young plants.

“The consequences for us are that we have lost about 80% of sales because they have been cancelled. Most wholesale nurseries are, at the beginning of spring, jam-packed with plant material so those nurseries were full. No stock going out, means no space for the plants ordered from us last October.”

Rod says he is grateful that there’s some of the season left, but is concerned about the implications for next year.

“I am worried wholesalers might be extra cautious, either because they haven’t got enough space, or because they haven’t got enough cash, or they are uncertain what the trading will be in garden centres next year. Perhaps a mixture of all of those!”

NFU - Countryside July 2020

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New World Plants Ltd.
White Cottage
Main Street
Styrrup
South Yorkshire
DN11 8NB - UK

CONTACT

Please note we are solely a wholesale supplier and regret that we can only respond to trade enquiries.

PLANT BREEDING AND DEVELOPMENT

Phone: (+44) (0) 1568 611521
email: plant.information@new-worldplants.com

YOUNG PLANT SALES & TC SUPPLY

Phone: (+31) 6 53588940
email: stephen@walterblom.nl

]]>
Mediteranean Gardening and Outdoor Living. https://new-worldplants.com/mediteranean-gardening-and-outdoor-living-2016/ Tue, 28 Apr 2020 05:06:03 +0000 http://new-worldplants.com/plantfinder/?p=2865

“ Amazing Agapanthus and Sassy Salvias”

Mediteranean Gardening and Outdoor Living Magazine

Mediteranean-Gardening-March-2016

“ Amazing Agapanthus and Sassy Salvias”

You may have an understanding of both of these great garden plants but are you aware of the many new introductions being bred and introduced by a plantsman in the UK ? Lets take a peek at some recent introductions and see if these don't wet your appetite to try some in your own garden or as many people do grow them perfectly well in large patio containers.

Agapanthus are known to add drama and excitement to your borders, with familiar globose flower heads on elegant stems, mostly in shades of blue that appear in July & August. Tolerant of a wide range of soils from chalk to clay so long as they are not in boggy conditions in winter. Originally from South Africa and often called the Blue African lily. They are also very amenable to Pot culture but need good fertilization in subsequent years to maintain good flowering.

Rod Richards of New World Plants has been crossing the main specie praecox with a pendulous type called inapertus and raised some great new hybrids that have numerous flowers on each flower stem, often having a semi pendulous shape which are beautiful in their own right. These crossings however has led to some astonishing colour breaks !!

Agapanthus ‘Silver Lining’ has numerous flowers on every stem that are silver white with a pewter grey stripe on the inside and almost silver in bud before they open. Stems are approx. 75cm tall. A real show stopper and good also as a cut flower!!

Agapanthus ‘Lilac Lullaby’ is being introduced this year for the first time, again has a semi pendulous flower head with lots of lilac – lavender tubular flowers approx. 75cm tall. Such a unique colour for an Agapanthus and worth adding to your wants list !

Agapanthus-Silver-Lining-in-basket

Above and Below:
Agapanthus 'Silver Lining'

Agapanthus-Silver-Lining

Below:
Agapanthus 'Lilac Lullaby'

Agapanthus-Lilac-Lullaby

Agapanthus ‘Star Dust’ is part of a series of three very different varieties ( Star Quality and Star Gazer being the other two); this one stands out in the crowd being intermediate in height (approx. 45cm) lots of flowers per stem and almost ink blue when in bud. The exciting display is unfolded when the blooms open and reveal a pale blue center with a dark stripe down the middle of each flower. Each plant yields several flower spikes when mature.

Agapanthus-Star-Dust

Above:
Agapanthus 'Star Dust'

Salvias in particular the perennial types have wowed garden enthusiasts for years as they add long continuous flowering to borders when most other things have fizzled out! They are a great attraction for bees and butterflies too which adds interest and encourages wildlife.

Salvias do best in sunny borders and can compliment patio pots with many other plants and can even add a touch of class to sub tropical borders. This group of plants is renown for having over 700 species worldwide but many of them are not hardy and must be protected during the winter months.

Rod has been working with Salvia enthusiasts in different parts of the world and has introduced lots of new exciting varieties in recent years and has a great line up to follow, here are a few stunning selections to make your jaw drop !

Salvia ‘Amistad’ is a sterile hybrid with the most amazing colour combination you could imagine! Amistad comes from the Spanish for Friendship and is something it lives up for as anyone who sees this in your garden will want this but remember it has plant protection ! It's a variety that responds to pinching to keep in shape and restrict height as it will get to over 1.5m left on its own! Numerous flower spikes each with many violet purple tubular flowers erupting from a black calyx. Great for humming birds too am told! It has a tuberous root stock and so if it goes dormant in winter it will come back up again late spring.

Amistad-2
Amistad-1
Amistad-3

Salvia ‘Joy’ must be the prettiest release in the last couple of years, a greggii hybrid making a neat shrubby like bush of fresh green oval leaves and producing almost until first frosts, masses of bold yet dainty flowers with pretty deep pink throats and pale pink lips, such a beautiful mix.

Salvia-Joy-group
Salvia-Joy

Salvia ‘Sunset Strip’ is a real show stopper, if you want something bold and has that tropical feel then this is the plant to have ! Has great warm colour tones of deep red to almost peach, flowers are large and when planted in large containers with the right combination of silver foliage and white flowered subjects makes this a hot Sassy combo that will grab anybody’s attention !!

More of these new hybrids in both of these genera are being released each year as they have completed rigorous testing in the trial gardens at New World Plants so watch this space as more exciting introductions come along !

Salvia-Sunset-Strip

More of these new hybrids in both of these genera are being released each year as they have completed rigorous testing in the trial gardens at New World Plants so watch this space as more exciting introductions come along !

For more information visit
www.new-worldplants.com
Where the Future is Growing
NWP is a strictly wholesale only nursery

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NFU Horticulture – Growing Future Trade. https://new-worldplants.com/nfu-horticulture-growing-future-trade/ Thu, 23 Apr 2020 16:56:41 +0000 http://new-worldplants.com/plantfinder/?p=2671

NFU British Farmer & Grower Magazine.

NFU-Horticulture
NFU-Header-Image

GROWING FUTURE TRADE

Rod and Kym Richards’ back garden is tucked away off a minor lane in rural Herefordshire, but at the same time, it’s the proving ground for a high-tech, international and growing business, with clients in Europe, the US, Canada, South America, Israel, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand. Tom Sales investigates...

NFU members New World Plants are breeders in their own right, but they specialise in sourcing fresh varieties and turning them into the garden centre sensations of the  future.

They cast a wide net – to this manicured 3.6-acre site they bring in specimens from around the globe for down-to-earth testing, assessing their suitability for the UK market and those far further afield.

Here the pride and joys of future borders are weighed up, photographed and then promoted to the nurseries which will sell them on licence, with every sale returning a royalty.

The Richards are a husband and wife team, their premises small, but this is big business.

“Take Salvia Amistad,” says Rod, pointing to a profusion of deep purple
flowers on near-black stems.
“That came from a breeder in Argentina and we’ve sold 1.36 million worldwide

since 2012. We started with just one.”

Iberis Masterpiece, meanwhile, has clocked up 2.7m sales, again from a handful of promising plants on the Richards’ trials plot.

The rate of attrition is high; as Kym puts it, “for every 20 new plants, one or two will have potential”.

It can take years, but those that prove their worth will meet a hungry market.

“All the nurseries want the next new plant,” says Rod. “And there are avid collectors out there looking for new varieties. People collect them like postage stamps - it’s such a vibrant audience.”

The novel specimens come to Herefordshire courtesy of contacts established during a lifetime in the trade. Rod is a graduate of the Royal Horticultural Society’s elite seven-year qualification and went on to run a highly successful wholesale nursery in Hampshire, specialising in Alpines.

Then there’s the hands-on approach to sourcing which sees Rod just back from America for a few days before a trip to Israel and then a four-week world tour of breeders and shows.

Add to that the unexpected hybrids sent to them by amateurs and “the odd chance discovery in a field”, and the Richards’ garden is a treasure trove of rare colour, both for New World Plants and the breeders they work with.

Salvia Amistad has returned “life changing” opportunities to the grower who first came across it, while a widow in Somerset benefited for a number of years from her late husband’s Schizostylis Pink Princess due to the Richards’ ability to bring the plant to market.

The cultured approach

Turning this idyll into a thriving business has meant a high-tech, outsourced approach to ‘scaling up’ discoveries. The

FUTURE THREATS

The biggest single threat toThe Richards’ business is a word with an ‘X’ in it, but it’s not the one you might think.

“A bigger concern than Brexit is a disease called Xylella,” says Rod.

“So far it’s not in the UK but, sadly, I believe it’s only a matter of time. There
are consequences already–Australia sees us as the EU, which means every single variety we send in, even though we are free of the disease, has to be tested. It costs around £100 per sample. Then there are the regulations around quarantine and the cost of precautions. It’s a real worry, but our strategy is to make more of our plant varieties available as elite stock (highly screened parent plants) to safeguard the future.”

The NFU is in regular contact with officials at the APHA about Xylella and is in discussions with the European Nurserystock Association to ensure a joined-up vision of plant health issues across the EU.

Hesperantha-Pink-Princess

Richards nurture their valuable hybrids in Herefordshire, but they also cultivate relationships thousands of miles away.

With barely any on-site glass, they work with two laboratories in the UK and one in Poland, who take tissue cultures of successful specimens and return ‘plantlets’ in sealed flasks and agar jelly.

“If only you had been here in July,” says Rod pointing to the office table.

“This table had 20,000 plantlets for shipping to our broker at Heathrow.”

Then there are the relationships with licensed growers, including two huge new nurseries in Israel which capitalise on a perfect climate to produce millions of cuttings year-round, some of the Richards’ varieties among them.

“A nursery which happens to grow our hardy fuchsias ships several million plants across a wide range of varieties around the world each week at the start the year – that’s how big the business is over there, it’s phenomenal.”

There’s also the more prosaic - but vital - relationship with the Animal and Plant Health Agency. It inspects their site under the EU Plant Passport regime, but also arrives on the morning of each shipment to ensure it meets the plant protection requirements of its destination.

“We have a very good connection,” says Rod, flicking through certificates for
exports around the world. “Some things can go under a general permit.

For others they specify that this plant must be certified by a UK lab as being free from X,Y, Z diseases. The APHA knows the requirements for each country and it’s our job to meet them.

“One of my biggest fears is that moving plants around will become more difficult in the future.”

The Brexit effect?

For now the requirements are rigorous, especially for Australia and those mega nurseries in Israel. But the Richards’ shipment records show they are clearly achievable, and that should provide comfort as UK Horticulture looks to fresh post-Brexit markets.

In that respect, the New World Plants model might prove a particularly hardy variety.

“In terms of the business I don’t see it changing much,” Rod says.

“I was very pro-Brexit. I don’t like a lot of the red tape. There are going to
be some implications. Are we still going to have European Plant Breeders’ Rights or will we go back to how it was set up originally – one for the UK, one for this country, one for that?

“There might also be currency impacts. But overall? Because of that hunger, the desire for new plants, people are still going to be interested. I’m the one that’s going around the world, they’re not.

“Without being complacent, why should it be any different than the people we are already dealing with in Australia, New Zealand and the USA? Brexit doesn’t even enter into it.”

Blueprint or not, the Richards’ business certainly offers a perspective for the thousands of customers who flock to garden centres every Sunday.

“If you look at a plant on sale you haven’t a clue about the story behind it,” says Rod.

“Someone could have been evaluating it for years, they’ve had to enter in legal agreements with the breeder, they’ve had to research it, get it into tissue culture, test it for diseases, deal with the rights and regulations and get it produced en masse so it’s available for the public.

“It’s not a business where you can grasp the nettle overnight, you have to have passion and patience,” Rod concludes. ■

 

NewWorld Plants offers bare roots plants, plugs in various sizes, tissue culture and unrooted cuttings, as well as plant development and export opportunities.

Find out more at

www.new-worldplants.com

NFU-Amistad

Salvia Amistad proved a huge success

NFU-Fuchia

5,000 Fuchsia Chilli Reds bound for Holland

NFU-Iberis

Iberis Masterpiece

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New World Plants Ltd.
White Cottage
Main Street
Styrrup
South Yorkshire
DN11 8NB - UK

CONTACT

Please note we are solely a wholesale supplier and regret that we can only respond to trade enquiries.

PLANT BREEDING AND DEVELOPMENT

Phone: (+44) (0) 1568 611521
email: plant.information@new-worldplants.com

YOUNG PLANT SALES & TC SUPPLY

Phone: (+31) 6 53588940
email: stephen@walterblom.nl

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