Garden Centres
Notcutts, Cranleigh

What's On

May 2008 - June 2008
For a full programme of events throughout the year pick up a What"s On leaflet from the garden centre now.
guide dogs 2008 Charity

We are delighted to announce that Guide Dogs for the Blind is our company charity for 2008, look out for fund-raising events at the centre throughout the year.

Hanging

Hanging Basket Demonstration – Saturday 3rd May - 10.30am to 4.30pm

Top Tips for great hanging baskets from garden writer, Gareth Salter.

owl

Wildlife Day – Wednesday 28th May – 10.30am to 4.30pm

Celebrate the wonders of British Wildlife. See the fabulous birds of prey, and learn about their place in nature. Plus there will be the RSPB, Surrey Wildlife Trust, Wildlife Aid and Butterfly Conservation.

bulfinches

Look Out for Wildlife

Calling all children – enter Notcutts Wildlife competition for your chance to win a Bird Box Camera for your school and £50 in wildlife products for you. All you have to do is to paint or draw pictures of wildlife and bring them into the garden centre to be displayed. The winner will be announced at the end of May.

 

Plant Doctor

Meet the Plant Doctor – Saturday 7th June –from 10.30 – 4.30pm

Bring all your gardening questions to gardening expert Mark Vaughan.

 

Competition Enter Cranleigh’s New Images Competition sponsored by Notcutts Garden Centre and run in partnership with Cranleigh Parish Council and The Cranleigh Initiative.

Images is the new community competition to replace Cranleigh in Bloom. Now anyone with a camera or art materials can enter to win prizes.

There will be £30 and £10 prizes in Notcutts vouchers for 1st and 2nd prizes in each of the seven categories:

Best Wildlife picture (drawing, painting or photo)
Best Garden picture (drawing, painting or photo)
Best picture by child up to 9 years
Best picture by child 10 to 14 years
Best flower picture
Best vegetable/fruit picture
Best picture depicting Cranleigh life

Take a look around Cranleigh, use your imagination and you’ll see there are so many opportunities to enter. Take your drawing, painting or printed photograph to Notcutts Garden Centre, Guildford Road, Cranleigh or post it to DSH Public Relations, 42 Alexandra Road, Farnborough, Hants, GU14 6DA to arrive no later than Sunday 30th November 2008.

 

 
News
May 2008 - June 2008

bird watch

Image by Mike Hammett

WATCH THE BIRDIE – WIN A CAMERA

For a chance to win a Bird Box Camera for their school and £50 worth of wildlife products for themselves, children can enter Notcutts ‘Look Out for Wildlife’ competition. All children have to do is to paint or draw pictures of wildlife and bring them into the garden to be displayed.

The winner will be announced at the end of May and children can visit the garden centre in half term to see the pictures entered into the competition.

On Wednesday 28th May from 10.30am to 4.30pm the garden centre is organising a free wildlife day, when Jan Prymaka’s fascinating Birds of Prey will be in the garden centre, along with other wildlife organisations, for Notcutts’ ‘Look Out for Wildlife’ event.

The Guide Dogs for The Blind Association, will also be visiting the garden centre. There will be lots of free to enter competitions with some great prizes to be won including an exclusive family outing to the Guide Dogs breeding establishment. As The Guide Dogs for The Blind Association is Notcutts chosen charity this year there will be a special wildlife treasure hunt map at £1 a go (proceeds to Guide Dogs) with the prize being the exclusive family visit.

“As our customers, and particularly children, are very interested in wildlife we often organise wildlife days in school holidays,” says garden centre manager, Richard Hamlyn. “There was so much interest in the bird box cameras last year, with some of the garden centres actually having nests in their boxes, that we thought it would make an excellent prize for schools. The bird box camera is just one of 460 wildlife products we stock, so there’s something for everyone.”

beetroot

BEETROOT JUICE SALES SOAR

Sales of beetroot juice, both in the restaurant and shop, are soaring at Notcutts since the media reported that drinking 500ml of beetroot juice a day can significantly reduce blood pressure.

“We realised that we were constantly replenishing stocks of James White Beetroot Juice,” says Richard Hamlyn, garden centre manager. “James White juices always sell well but we were surprised that we were ordering far more of the beetroot variety and the reason is that people have discovered that it helps to cut blood pressure.

“The key beneficial ingredient appears to be nitrate, which is also found in green, leafy vegetables,” continues Richard. “We are finding that more and more customers want to grow their own vegetables, whether it be in containers, their gardens or on allotments, that we have significantly increased our kitchen garden range to meet that demand. Some people don’t like germinating their own seeds, some people want just a few plants and others lose seedlings to the elements or pests and so they come into the garden centre to buy established plants in the kitchen garden range. Coupled with the huge range of seeds we stock, there is something for the novice to the most experienced vegetable grower.”

“Beetroot is so easy to grow and now is the time to plant it. There are so many delicious recipes you can create using beetroot, but if you don’t want to grow them yourselves then the garden centre has beetroot juice,” says Richard.

Researchers discovered that in healthy volunteers blood pressure was reduced within an hour of drinking the juice. The study, by Barts and The London School of Medicine and the Peninsula Medical School, could suggest a low-cost way to treat hypertension. Previously, the protective effects of vegetable-rich diets have been attributed to their antioxidant vitamin content. Professor Amrita Ahluwalia of Barts and The London School of Medicine says, “Drinking beetroot juice, or consuming other nitrate-rich vegetables, might be a simple way to maintain a healthy cardiovascular system.” (source BBC news website).

Guide Dogs

NOTCUTTS CHOOSE GUIDE DOGS FOR THE BLIND AS THEIR 2008 CHARITY

Notcutts has chosen Guide Dogs for The Blind Association as their 2008 charity. Guide Dogs will benefit from all fundraising at the garden centre.

February half term, Tuesday 19th February from 10.30am to 4.30pm, will see the official launch of the fundraising with Guide Dog puppies, their handlers and GDBA volunteers in the garden centre talking to customers about the organisation and its work. The ever popular Jan will also be at Notcutts with his fabulous birds of prey.

“Guide Dogs have worked with Notcutts in helping to build up some very successful All About Dogs Days at other Notcutts garden centres,” says garden centre manager Richard Hamlyn. “The organisation was so professional and supportive at these events that we all voted to work with them in 2008 and extend our support to fundraising across the group.

“During the year the money from our wishing well and fundraising within the garden centre will all be for the benefit of Guide Dogs,” continues Richard. “This activity will all be complemented with regular visits by Guide Dogs volunteers and their puppies and dogs. We have always found that such visits are a hit with customers who have a warm spot for the adorable dogs.”

 

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