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  • Home
    • Who we are
  • Get involved
  • Portfolio
    • Weavers Piece
  • News
    • Tips and advice
  • Sponsors
  • Partners
    • ActivLives
    • Bridge Project
    • Common Lands
    • Eden-Rose Coppice
    • Greener Sudbury
    • Love Sudbury
    • Sudbury Open Gardens
  • Competitions
    • Anglia in Bloom
    • Pride of Sudbury
    • Wheelbarrow competition
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GARDENING TIPS



with bridge farm plants
NEWS
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Top tips for your Pride of Sudbury entries!

8/5/2022

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The Pride of Sudbury gardening competition is now open to entries - get yours in by clicking here - and we at Bridge Farm Plants are delighted to share some of our expertise to help you along!

We share which hanging basket plants are perfect for pollinators; which plants are best for container growing (and how to look after them); how to reduce water usage in the garden; how to help wildlife in the garden; and how to grow the tallest sunflowers!

Click on the images to enlarge, or click on the files below to download.
You can also pick up printouts from Sudbury in Bloom's stalls at the Green Sundays events on Market Hill.
a4_pos_watering_handouts.pdf
File Size: 316 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File

a4_pos_baskets_handout.pdf
File Size: 192 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File

a4_pos_pots_handout.pdf
File Size: 303 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File

a4_pos_wildlife_handout.pdf
File Size: 273 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File

pos_sunflower_a5_handout.pdf
File Size: 414 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File


Bridge Farm Plants, Hadleigh Road, Monks Eleigh, IP7 7AY
Open 10am - 5pm every day. 01449 740502 www.bridgefarmplants.co.uk

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Pruning Salvias for winter

26/10/2021

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Sudbury in Bloom and Bridge Farm Plants share a love of Salvias, and with good reason!

They start flowering in early June and with minimal care can keep filling your borders with colour until November. They are suitable for sun and part-shade and are perfect for pollinators.

There has been a huge number of new varieties of woody-stemmed Salvias introduced in recent years, and you will find many of them around town. Hot Lips is best known, with it's red and white flowers, but they come in virtually every colour of the rainbow.

Once the late-autumn flowers start to fade, simply cut back the whole plant by about half to a neat shape. This stops long shoots get damaged in the winter winds, and also stops the plant developing a messy, sprawly shape.

Ideally cut back to directly above leaf shoots, as this is where the plant will start to regrow next year. Easy!
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Tips courtesy of Bridge Farm Plants at Corn Craft, Monks Eleigh IP7 7AY. Open 10am to 4pm every day.
www.bridgefarmplants.co.uk

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Pride of Sudbury: Growing sunflowers tutorial

11/6/2021

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Earn your green fingers young!

Our special children's category is for youngsters living in the Sudbury and Cornard districts - aged 10 years old and under. Can you grow the tallest sunflower in town??

Watch our video tutorial to learn all about growing sunflowers.

If you don't already have a plant, come and claim a free one from us during the Green Sundays event on Sudbury Market Hill on Sunday 20th June, 10am - 3pm!
Click to enter competition
Tips courtesy of Bridge Farm Plants at Corn Craft, Monks Eleigh IP7 7AY. Open 10am to 4pm every day.
www.bridgefarmplants.co.uk

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Pride of Sudbury: Summer patio pot tutorial

11/6/2021

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Get top tips on filling your patio pots and planters this summer, and then enter our competition for residents of the Sudbury district.

You could also get creative and see what other items you can plant up - just make sure they have drainage!

Take a photo or two and upload them to our Pride of Sudbury competition form!
Deadline for entering is Friday 16th July 2021
Click to enter competition
Tips courtesy of Bridge Farm Plants at Corn Craft, Monks Eleigh IP7 7AY. Open 10am to 4pm every day.
www.bridgefarmplants.co.uk

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Pride of Sudbury: Hanging basket tutorial

11/6/2021

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Need some pointers on planting up hanging baskets? Watch our video tutorial, have a go, and then enter our competition!
Click to enter competition
Tips courtesy of Bridge Farm Plants at Corn Craft, Monks Eleigh IP7 7AY. Open 10am to 4pm every day.
www.bridgefarmplants.co.uk

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Pride of Sudbury: Wildlife gardening tips

10/6/2021

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Our Pride of Sudbury competition launches on Friday!
It is open to all residents in the Sudbury district, including Ballingdon, Great Cornard and Little Cornard.

One of the categories is best Wildlife & Eco Friendly Garden. Our video gives lots of tips and advice for achieving this. If your garden ticks a lot of the boxes then get your entry in to us!
Click to enter competition
Tips courtesy of Bridge Farm Plants at Corn Craft, Monks Eleigh IP7 7AY. Open 10am to 4pm every day.
www.bridgefarmplants.co.uk

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Chelsea Chopping!

1/6/2021

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The Chelsea Chop is a pruning technique carried out on late-flowering perennials. These are flowers that come back year after year, and typically bloom August and later.

Chopping can be used to delay flowering times. If you chop some of your plants and leave others you will be able to give yourself a good spread of flowers over a longer period.
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The other reason is to stop plants from growing so tall that they flop over, fall over and/or get damaged in the wind.

Suitable plants include Sedums, tall Asters (michaelmas daisy), tall Rudbeckias & Echinaceas (coneflowers), Leucanthemums, Heleniums & Helianthus, and Phlox.
In late May or early June chop off the top third or top half of the plants. Ideally cut immediately above leaf shoots, as plants will regrow better from these points.

Come flowering times you will have shorter, stockier, stronger plants that shouldn't need staking - and are therefore lower maintenance!
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Tips courtesy of Bridge Farm Plants at Corn Craft, Monks Eleigh.
Open 10am to 4pm every day.
www.bridgefarmplants.co.uk

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Planting up winter hanging baskets

6/9/2020

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If you have never dared to plant up your own hanging baskets and planters, now is a great time to try, as the winter ones are simpler to do than the summer ones!
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At the most basic end, two different packs of pansies and violas will fill a couple of baskets for very little money – one plant in the centre, then a mix of four or five around the edge.

Take it up a step with a normal pansy or viola in the centre, surrounded by a couple of trailing Ivy and two or three of the fantastic trailing ‘Cool Wave’ pansies.

You can add more interest by using an evergreen plant as the centrepiece – at Bridge Farm Plants we use young conifers, shrubs, grasses, herbs and heathers – which can all be planted out into the garden afterwards.
If you want to give yourself something to look forward to in the spring, add in a handful of dwarf daffodils or other low-growing bulbs under the planting!

At this time of year we are lightly trimming most of the plants we use to encourage them to bush out, for more flowers and better displays, as we do with our summer baskets.

If you leave doing your baskets till later in the season you are likely to need more plants as they will not grow much in the colder weather.

For healthy plants and helpful advice head to Bridge Farm Plants at Corn Craft, Monks Eleigh.
Open 10am-4pm Weds-Sun.

www.bridgefarmplants.co.uk

Order pre-planted hanging baskets for home delivery or collection at Bridge Farm Plants through supplier nursery Katie’s Garden Plant Centre

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Gardening advice from Bridge Farm Plants - pruning shrubs, perennials and roses

9/7/2020

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July is the month for pruning

SHRUBS

Early-summer flowering shrubs are due their annual prunes about now. Treat Deutzia, Philadelphus and Wiegela the same way: cut out the old flowering shoots (they will look quite ragged with side shoots) and leave the straight shoots: these are the ones that will bloom next year. If it has been a good flowering year you might want to leave some of the old shoots for bulk!
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PERENNIALS
Sometimes it pays to be ruthless – if you cannot see any more buds on your Lupins, chop them back to the base now – leaves, stems and all – and you should be rewarded with extra flowers later on, as well as attractive fresh foliage.

Other perennials which will benefit from the ‘Hampton Hack’ (as opposed to the ‘Chelsea Chop’) are Polemonium (Jacob’s Ladder) and the soft herbaceous Salvias, such as Caradonna, East Friesland and May Night – the likes of Salvia Hot Lips are treated differently.

If you cannot see any more buds or flowers, other perennials that should be cut back to just above ground level include Delphiniums, Geraniums, Geums, Leucanthemums, Tanacetums and Veronicas, amongst others.

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ROSES
Keep the blooms coming on your Roses by regularly cutting out old flowers.
You should cut to just above a leaf with five ‘leaflets’ – where you should see a small nub (where arrow is pointing in the photo) also known as a bud eye.
This will become the new shoot, so pick one that is facing away from other stems to avoid congestion.
If your Rose has clusters of flowers, like this pictured Anna Ford, you might need to cut out quite a chunk of growth, as pictured, if there are no more buds.

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For healthy plants and helpful advice head to Bridge Farm Plants at Corn Craft, Monks Eleigh.
Open 10am-4pm Weds-Sun.

www.bridgefarmplants.co.uk

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Gardening advice from Bridge Farm Plants – fruit bushes, clematis and roses

2/3/2020

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Find a gap in the weather to get your garden prepared for spring.
If you haven’t done so already make sure you get out and give Roses, summer-flowering Clematis and fruit bushes their annual prune.
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CLEMATIS
Clematis are divided into three groups based on how and when they should be pruned.

Ideally any cutting should be done just above where strong new shoots are appearing. This should speed up new growth and encourage multiple stems, meaning the plant will bush out, leading to more coverage and more blooms.
It is worth doing this with any young Clematis regardless of their pruning code – you want the bushiness to start low down!

Early-flowering varieties (April/May), including montanas, alpinas, macropetalas can be tidied after flowering if desired, or just leave them to it!

Summer-flowering Clematis (May-July) – the normal, large-flowered varieties – can be tidied February/March when they start to reshoot. It can be worth cutting them back to stimulate leaves and flowers lower down the plant if it has been bare in previous years.

Late-flowering varieties (July-Sept), such as delicate viticellas, texensis and tanguticas should be cut back hard in February/March, to as little as 1ft. You will be amazed how quickly they grow in a season!


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ROSES
The aim of pruning is to have a clear, uncluttered centre, allowing air to circulate around the plant and reducing the chances of fungal diseases.

In your garden you will want to cut back your hybrid teas, floribundas and patio roses by roughly a third to a half, although they can be cut harder if they need rejuvenating.

First step is to remove any dead, damaged or weak stems.
If any stems are crossing, choose one to remove to avoid problems of stems rubbing against one another – this can damage the stems, leading to possible infection.

Next, look for strong new shoots and cut just above these.

New growth will be in the direction the new shoot is facing (demonstrated by arrows on photo), so always try to cut above outward facing buds: you are trying to keep the centre of the plant clear!

As a finishing touch treat your Rose to a feed of manure or other fertiliser.


FRUIT BUSHES
The clock is ticking to give fruit bushes their annual prune. Many of the principles are the same as rose pruning: cut out dead, dying, diseased and weak stems to base.

The aim is to have an uncluttered centre so other stems might need thinning out too.
Gooseberries, redcurrants and blackcurrants usually crop best on stems that are two or three years old, so anything older can be removed.

Autumn fruiting raspberries couldn’t be easier: just cut down everything to the ground. Summer raspberries are best cut after fruiting.


For healthy plants and helpful advice head to Bridge Farm Plants at Corn Craft, Monks Eleigh.
Open 10am-4pm Weds-Sun.

www.bridgefarmplants.co.uk

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