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Friday 21st April, 2017

Hi

Garden backbone...
While unloading some of the new plants that have just been put into stock I couldn't help but admire the gorgeous Loropetalum cones, they were just popping, they look so good. There were two varieties I saw; Burgundy with, yes you guessed it, burgundy coloured leaves and pink flower and Iceberry with it's contrasting green leaves and white flowers. I found myself automatically going into design mode, planning in my head where I could put them as they would make such a wonderfully structural element.  I have always been taken with the crisp look of formal gardens. The neat straight rows and the uniformity created by the selection of just the right plants for the effect desired. No matter what style of garden I want, it needs structure to maintain it's shape throughout the seasons. I like a good selection of structural plants as these are so important in keeping the framework of my garden when seasonal plants die down for the winter or lose much of their presence through the shedding of their leaves as they undress for winter. 

Standards, Cones, balls and hedges form the backbone of the garden and are available in such diversity. Standard forms such as Camellias, MichelliaChoisya TernataBay trees, Buxus SempervirensCitrus are all excellent evergreen options or Liquidambar Gumballs, Robinia Mop Tops or Lace Lady's if you are wanting deciduous varieties for creating height and shape and giving focal points.  Cones are a strong symmetrical pyramidal shape which looks great incorporated into a low hedge.  Cones I spied today are the Lorapetalum of course, Thuja Smaradg and the Teucrium Frutican cones, all evergreen plants.  Hedges make all the difference in a garden; they can lead you round the garden path, frame a bed, block an unwanted view, create a screen or provide sun or wind shelter, whatever their purpose, they are a mainstay in the garden as a structural element.

Beauty comes in the diverse range of colour, texture and form created by the different plants that have strong geometrical shape. I'm always on the lookout for plants that give these formal shapes with preferably the least amount of work.  Evergreen plants are the most versatile in regards to the structural aspect of plants as they give form and texture to the garden all year and their clipability means they are shapeable which is where the crispness of line in the formal garden comes from.   
                
With autumn on us and all the deciduous trees colouring up ready for leaf fall the evergreens are very much in evidence at the moment. Azaleas, Rhododendrons and Pieris plants are excellent evergreens that look stunning in a formal bed, mass planted or captured in containers.  These come in so many varieties there will be something suitable to help with whatever garden project you have on the go at the moment.
                 
Housekeeping.
ANZAC Day is nearly upon us.  We will be open from 1pm till 5pm on ANZAC Day only.  All other days it is as usual 8.30am to 5pm.  As these have been 2 short weeks we have been restricted on dispatch days for plant deliveries. We should be back to normal dispatch days shortly. 
Check out our specials in Family deals, there is an excellent selection of Native plants to commemorate ANZAC day if you are in the habit of planting for the occasion. 
Garlic Printanor and Elephant Garlic bulbs are now available.  Historically this is planted on the shortest day and harvested on the longest but that was back in the day when the moon was your calendar. Garlic can be planted in spring but autumn planting is recommended as your bulbs will be bigger and more flavour filled when you harvest them the next summer.  Garlic needs about 6 months to develop size and flavour. Plant these out earlier than the shortest day if you want to grow these wonderful plants for gifts at Christmas, this will allow you time to dry them in readiness for giving as gifts. 
Shallots are also in store now as these usually get planted at the same time as garlic. These are lovely big bulbs this year and are available in packs of 6.

Remember to backorder the roses or fruit trees you are wanting, or any plant we don't have in stock that is on order, as that will ensure your name is on the list for allocation of plants that are limited in stock.  Just go to www.wairere.co.nz to put your order in.  Remember to log in first if you have already purchased from us, if not registration is easy. Nationwide delivery of all plants is available and our online store is open 24/7.


Have a wonderful weekend and don't forget to honour our servicemen at the dawn parade. Lest we forget!
Ciao

Lloyd, Harry and the Wairere Team

Make it a Wairere weekend where even GNOMES know that gardening's not a drag.

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2017 Newsletters...

1st one for 2017 (26th January, 2017)

Grapefruit (2nd February, 2017)

Party time (10th February, 2017)

17 Feb (17th February, 2017)

Asteraceae (24th February, 2017)

Autumn Its Official 03032017 (3rd March, 2017)

The Camellia story (10th March, 2017)

Roses Half Price (16th March, 2017)

Clipped Camellias (23rd March, 2017)

Red and gold (31st March, 2017)

Wairere Newsletter 7th April (7th April, 2017)

A wet season indeed (13th April, 2017)

..... Form and texture

To Bee or not... (28th April, 2017)

Mothers Day (10th May, 2017)

Its Rose time again (19th May, 2017)

Winter colour (24th May, 2017)

Roses blooms (1st June, 2017)

Healthy roses (8th June, 2017)

Birthday brekkie (14th June, 2017)

winter solstice (22nd June, 2017)

Rose Names (29th June, 2017)

Dry July (7th July, 2017)

Dry July nearly half way (13th July, 2017)

school holidays (20th July, 2017)

Tree time (27th July, 2017)

unoffical spring (3rd August, 2017)

Signs of spring (11th August, 2017)

Tui cherries are blooming (18th August, 2017)

Sunshine at last (24th August, 2017)

slugs and snails (1st September, 2017)

Never fail choc cake (7th September, 2017)

Never fail choc cake (8th September, 2017)

sandpaper vine (15th September, 2017)

In the beginning (21st September, 2017)

The Villa (29th September, 2017)

Montanas (6th October, 2017)

Crepe Myrtles (13th October, 2017)

Te Aroha Airport (18th October, 2017)

Kumara plants are in (20th October, 2017)

French Tarragon 2 (27th October, 2017)

Trees (3rd November, 2017)

what happening (15th November, 2017)

Xeronema (17th November, 2017)

Summer Watering (25th November, 2017)

Officially summer 2 (1st December, 2017)

Wairere Newsletter (8th December, 2017)

Xmas Summer Holidays (22nd December, 2017)




Wairere Nursery
826 Gordonton Road, R D 1, Hamilton 3281 Ph: (07) 824 3430 Email: