Just in time for Spring, we're super excited to bring you our brand new assortment of indoor-outdoor Garden Plants! Choose from a range of unusual trees, shrubs and grasses. All of the plants in this collection come in growing pots, so you can move them inside in poor weather and outside in fair weather.
Garden Plants | Plants for terraces, balconies and conservatories
Garden Plants | Plants for terraces, balconies and conservatories
Philodendron 'Jose Buono'
Can you put these plants straight into your garden?
We would advise keeping most of our Garden Plants in the pots they come in. Some of our assortment, such as the Pinus negra and Fraser photinia ‘Chico,’ can be planted directly into well-draining soil in your outdoor space, while others, such as the Kalanchoe and the Tea Plant, will appreciate being moved inside when it gets frosty.
Keeping your Garden Plants in pots gives you maximum flexibility. If you end up redesigning your garden or purchasing some new patio furniture, you can shift your potted Garden plants to suit your new space. And if the weather turns and your plants aren’t coping, you can move them to a shadier or brighter spot accordingly.
What is a perennial plant?
If you’re new to gardening, you might be feeling a bit overwhelmed by a whole glossary of unfamiliar terms - what’s an annual? What’s a biennial?
Principally associated with flowering plants, but applicable to all varieties, the terms perennial, annual and biennial broadly refer to a plant’s lifecycle. Perennial plants live longer than annuals and biennials which come into fruition once and twice, respectively. Perennials should come into bloom and ‘come back’ over a period of at least 3 years.
All the plants in this collection have the capacity to live for a long time, as long as they’re cared for well.