Gardening Magazine

What’s New from Thompson & Morgan

By Danielcarruthers

I’ve recently been to a press preview of new varieties from the Ipswich seed company and have whittled down the many to the few that I found most interesting.  Top of my list is the Wasabi Rocket with leaves that really do have the tang of wasabi.  I will be making the first sowing this weekend.  I also got a top tip from Colin Randall, their vegetable guru, who really does know his onions, potatoes, tomatoes – in fact any vegetable.  If flea beetle is a problem, sow vulnerable plants in containers at least 30cm tall – this is higher than fleabeetles can jump.Colin Randall giving tips and Thompson and Morgan

Pea Terrain and Mange Tout Sweet Horizon are also interesting new late varieties – they are very mildew resistant and I was told that if I sow them this weekend I could be picking peas and mangetout in autumn right up to November.

home grown at T and M
peppery wasabi rocket leaves

When it comes to flowers and foliage plants, there was no shortage of colour, but my tastes are usually for subtle shades.  There’s a lovely new soft yellow cosmos called  Xanthos and a delicate colour-changing Argyranthemum Honey-Bees Light Pink with flowers that slowly fade to pink and a striking hardy begonia called Garden Angels.

Argyranthemum Honey-Bees
begonia called Garden Angels
 new soft yellow cosmos

I have mixed feelings about petunias – I love their fragrance and some of the soft-hued varieties, but I find them quite hard work to keep looking good over a long period – this probably says more about me than the petunias – but whatever the reason I generally don’t grow them.  For those who do though I thought Indian Summer and mustardy-coloured Dijon were both really attractive and I’ve included a photo of  Night Sky because it is so weird – it looks like a careless decorator has splattered it with paint.

Indian Summer Petunia
mustardy-coloured Dijon Petunia
 Night Sky looks like it has splattered it with paint


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