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Friday 29th May, 2020

Hi

We are nearly there... the nursery is almost looking as it should for this time of year.. and totally gorgeous! If you have been out lately you'll have seen the big space in the centre (which is not quite as big as it should be as there are still roses sitting on it). This area is being prepared for the potting season which begins Tuesday with our first delivery of roses from Glenavon Roses, the start of Rob Somerfields collection. 
All the orders that were occupying our potting area have now been reduced and moved so that we can now actually get potting. Thanks to all of you who helped by providing a town address so we could dispatch some rural deliveries and we have had word that we can now start sending the remaining rural deliveries.... Wahoo!!!
Ang has been making sure that the nursery now has all the plants that we would normally have in at this time of year. We are proud of our extensive selections of Camellias, Azaleas, Pieris, winter roses and all manner of  citrus just to name drop a few.
The gardening team have ripped around and sorted all the hedges with a much needed trim and they are looking pretty suave. aLooking from my point of view... we have certainly made big inroads to making up those six lost weeks.
To that end I need the rest of that space in the garden centre and so all those remaining roses, sitting there taking up space they are not supposed to have, are all now half price... Not available by mail order so you have to pop out and have a reccy.

Is masculinity proven?
My poor male Idesia trees' masculinity was in question the other week with the sighting of a small number of berries it had produced...  Not my field of expertise, Virgina, on the other hand, is totally fascinated in the subject of plant genetics. She went and found some research on plant plasticity... LOL I don't even know what that means but I got a quick refresher on some stuff from 30 years ago when I did my studies by correspondence.
I will see if I can get by and make this simple for us both!  So flowers come as, what I call, perfect ie male and female in the same flower. I believe that Virginia called them hermaphrodite.. of which many plants are.
Then there are plants that are monecious... which are those that have separate male and female flowers on the same plant. Dioecious plants have separate male and female trees and so our poor Idesia is an example of being dioecious. Now, just briefly, its not always just genetics that play their part here but also environment and a change, or stress, in environment may have an effect of how plants behave. I think that if you go back so some school science it's  called Genotype and Phenotype.. which may have been our Idesias' response of producing some berries... after all, survival is what it's all about... anyways, that enough of that. 
Let's chat about Podocarps or, more correctly, I should say Podocarpus... probably from around the age of gondwanaland and dinosaurs...  just by the way, any of this group of plants are Dioecious though some are monecious...  and produce male catkins and a simple single separate flower..   those bigh stands of kahikatea behinds us make  for lots of pollen in the seasons but its the fruit and seed thats fascinating.. did you know that you can eat the orange part of the kakikatea seed... 
moving right along another fab Podocarp is our native totara which just happens to make for a stunning long term hedge and a really good examp[ler of whgich can be seen at the Hasmilton gardens... I think that I have become


peonies 
citrus 
hedges 
want something different to clip
roses roses roses all current seasons slashed by 50% 
Its no surprise that this season is rolling along quite differently from other years and due to lock down we missed our usual reduction off of the last of the roses ..  the new seasons roses are due next week to be potted  and I need the space that they are occupying.. To that end its half price for all current seasons  roses that we have in the garden centre. sorry but not available for mail order -
Queens birthday being a long weekend 
have a great weekend 

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2020 Newsletters...

Fabulous Febuary (21st February, 2020)

Watering Woes (28th February, 2020)

Orchard or Orchard (6th March, 2020)

Autumn sale time (13th March, 2020)

New Season's Camellias (20th March, 2020)

Vege Plants (27th March, 2020)

Something to try (4th April, 2020)

Lockdown dinner for my bubble (12th April, 2020)

Feijoas in abundance 1 (18th April, 2020)

Alert level 3 (25th April, 2020)

Drive through (9th May, 2020)

New Rules (15th May, 2020)

..... Impending roses

Impending roses (29th May, 2020)

winter programme (6th June, 2020)

almost done (20th June, 2020)

Pruning Tech (3rd July, 2020)

In the Clouds (10th July, 2020)

Crystal ball and mags (24th July, 2020)

Chicken curry (14th August, 2020)

Big is Best (21st August, 2020)

Mouse tail plants coming (28th August, 2020)

Fluff n pretties (4th September, 2020)

Hybrid Clematis take 2 (18th September, 2020)

Those dry Places (25th September, 2020)

Water gardens (2nd October, 2020)

Balloon over Wairere (10th October, 2020)

Chilly Thursday 15/10 (16th October, 2020)

Spring has sprung (23rd October, 2020)

Kumara time (31st October, 2020)

Awesome Rain (12th November, 2020)

A pink selection of roses (16th November, 2020)

Hibiscus (22nd November, 2020)

Unexpected fruit (28th November, 2020)

Its time (5th December, 2020)

Hostas Again (12th December, 2020)

Its a wrap (19th December, 2020)




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