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#1
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I have in the past used Jersey plants direct. Would any of you suggest a
better supplier as I am about to place an order. Mike |
#2
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On Sat, 14 May 2011 12:24:53 +0100, "MuddyMike"
wrote: I have in the past used Jersey plants direct. Would any of you suggest a better supplier as I am about to place an order. Mike I've used JP for years without problems but this year I've had 3 "quality control" type problem deliveries out of 12 and have found that their usual speedy customer service people have slowed down a lot. I'll probably be going elsewhere next year myself. Otherwise I regularly use Dobies, Thomson and Morgan and Hayloft and have never had any problems or quality issues with them apart from the odd damage in transit which is always sorted quickly. In the past I've used Fothergills and Parkers but for bedding have had very mixed results so I avoid the former completely and stick to just bulbs from Parkers. Garden Bargains (gardenbargains.com) sell some decent stuff usually very cheaply but delivery is a nightmare - you never know when stuff will arrive and customer service isn't if you get my drift. Jake |
#3
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![]() "Jake" Nospam@invalid wrote in message ... On Sat, 14 May 2011 12:24:53 +0100, "MuddyMike" wrote: I have in the past used Jersey plants direct. Would any of you suggest a better supplier as I am about to place an order. Mike I've used JP for years without problems but this year I've had 3 "quality control" type problem deliveries out of 12 and have found that their usual speedy customer service people have slowed down a lot. I'll probably be going elsewhere next year myself. Otherwise I regularly use Dobies, Thomson and Morgan and Hayloft and have never had any problems or quality issues with them apart from the odd damage in transit which is always sorted quickly. In the past I've used Fothergills and Parkers but for bedding have had very mixed results so I avoid the former completely and stick to just bulbs from Parkers. Garden Bargains (gardenbargains.com) sell some decent stuff usually very cheaply but delivery is a nightmare - you never know when stuff will arrive and customer service isn't if you get my drift. Jake We always avoid all the risk of being sent 'second best and what we can't get rid of to our personal customers', by being a personal customer ourselves, visiting our local garden centres/nurseries seeing the quality and choosing our own :-)) and in one case, keeps/helps local employment :-)) Mike -- .................................... It's nice to be important, but it's more important to be nice. .................................... |
#4
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On 14/05/2011 12:24, MuddyMike wrote:
I have in the past used Jersey plants direct. Would any of you suggest a better supplier as I am about to place an order. Mike Gardening Direct. Only had one problem of poor plants in the last 5 years (two orders per year) an that was dealt with promptly. If you oredr 100+20 miniplugs (around £10) there are usually enough extra plants to make sure you have at least 120 malcolm |
#5
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Sacha:
On 2011-05-14 12:39:14 +0100, Jake Nospam@invalid said: On Sat, 14 May 2011 12:24:53 +0100, "MuddyMike" wrote: I have in the past used Jersey plants direct. Would any of you suggest a better supplier as I am about to place an order. Mike I've used JP for years without problems but this year I've had 3 "quality control" type problem deliveries out of 12 and have found that their usual speedy customer service people have slowed down a lot. I'll probably be going elsewhere next year myself. Otherwise I regularly use Dobies, Thomson and Morgan and Hayloft and have never had any problems or quality issues with them apart from the odd damage in transit which is always sorted quickly. In the past I've used Fothergills and Parkers but for bedding have had very mixed results so I avoid the former completely and stick to just bulbs from Parkers. Garden Bargains (gardenbargains.com) sell some decent stuff usually very cheaply but delivery is a nightmare - you never know when stuff will arrive and customer service isn't if you get my drift. Jake There seem to be masses of 'deals' in the papers today, so you could look there. I can't vouch for them because obviously, we don't buy them! We buy bedding plants in as plugs and pot them on into 9cm or 10cm pots, so it's certainly worth checking the size of the pots. What sounds like a huge bargain might turn out not to be if you get much smaller plants than you expect. Hi What is the advantage of potting them on? I normally buy plugs & plant them straight out into the ground, is that a mistake? Kate xx |
#6
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![]() "Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2011-05-15 16:23:10 +0100, Jake Nospam@invalid said: On Sun, 15 May 2011 15:41:16 +0100, Sacha wrote: On 2011-05-15 15:27:46 +0100, Kate said: pruned a bit Hi What is the advantage of potting them on? I normally buy plugs & plant them straight out into the ground, is that a mistake? Kate xx I think it depends on the size of the plugs, their root growth and the weather. Some will simply be too small and 'feeble' to fend for themselves, especially if we have a cold snap or very heavy downpours of rain. For that reason, some people shop around a bit to see who sends out the best developed root-systems. In the past, before I married a nurseryman, I've bought plugs and done just as you say but with very mixed results. We find that potting them on into 9cm pots gives them time to grow a strong root system before they're put into the ground or into containers. I'm not fastidious about the old "9cm pot" idea. Largely because I don't have enough space. There are some plants that need the space but I get excellent results with many varieties using cell trays. These days I get trays that are half-seed-tray size and have either 9 or 12 cells in them. Impatiens and petunias, for example, seem to like the space of a 9 cell tray whilst bedding begonias come on better in 12 cell trays than in larger cells. FWIW, I've found these half-seed-tray size cell things better than the usual full size trays you find in garden centres, if only because the individual half trays can be turned round so the plants in the middle get more light. We sell some of those things in cells as well, Jake and Lobelia goes out in trays or rows of cells from a tray but as we're dealing in many thousands of plants to be sold to thousands of people over several weeks, they can't possibly be left in cells all that time. That's why some of the companies advertising plugs now are saying they're having a 'sale', I should think! Thank you Sascha for confirming what I have been saying "Getting rid of what the personal buyer has not bought" Mike -- .................................... It's nice to be important, but it's more important to be nice. .................................... The hot weather will have brought a lot of things on more quickly than usual. Things like Bacopa and Bidens, Lysimachia nummularia, Isotoma, Verbenas, Scaveola - sprawly things - would just be a horrible mess. Bigger and more beefy plants like Petunias, Million Bells, that sort of thing go into 10cm pots and develop a nice hearty root system. I grow everything in coir as I find that (reliably) results in a far stronger growth of both roots and plant above ground. Here, around mid May (next week - hooray) is the time to start planting up the containers with what will be well-developed plants. I've done half a dozen containers today. It's always fun choosing just what to use where. I've got to finish them tomorrow and in the meantime, hope for a bit of rain, too. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon |
#7
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Thanks for all the input folks. I have looked at the alternatives suggested
but have spent my 50 quid with Jersey plants direct, as they seem to offer what I want at what I can afford. Now waiting to see if the couriers do there bit. Mike |
#8
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On Mon, 16 May 2011 22:38:41 +0100, "MuddyMike"
wrote: Thanks for all the input folks. I have looked at the alternatives suggested but have spent my 50 quid with Jersey plants direct, as they seem to offer what I want at what I can afford. Now waiting to see if the couriers do there bit. Mike Please let us know how you get on. I'd be particularly interested given my not-so-good experience this year after several years of good quality from them. Jake |
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