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GBD MARCH/APRIL 2011


INNOVATION 41 FLOWERING Idea blooms in Harrogate A colourful new flower concept for golf clubs as seen at BTME, Harrogate.


Pictured: Flower mix brightens up the course Stephen Alderton, marketing and


with seed breeder Top Green, launched Euroflor urban flower seed mixtures at BTME, Harrogate. Brightening up the golf course, natural floral cultivars are mixed with wild flower species to provide horticultural excellence. Tese mixes help to provide areas which will give back to nature what has often been taken away by the destruction of natural habitats. Attracting wildlife throughout their long- flowering period from late spring well into the autumn they offer animals and insects cover and an extended food source. Brian Robinson, seed research director at


F


Rigby Taylor, said: “Euroflor mixtures provide a new solution for environmental flower displays at golf clubs. “Tey look great at entrances to the course,


around the clubhouse and can be used to brighten up car parking areas. Tey also encourage biodiversity on areas of the course itself as wildlife is supported for a far longer period. Trials have been a great success and feedback from clubs, their members and the public has been amazing.”


Seeds of success All the preparation required with Euroflor is a clean seed bed and then seed can be sown directly into the selected sites in a sand mix at 3-4g per square metre. Sowing can take place from mid-March to the end of May and may be staggered for later flowering. Irrigation during the first three weeks will only be required if conditions are dry.


OLLOWING extensive successful trials at golf clubs in the UK, specialist seed agent Rigby Taylor, in partnership


Great results do not take long – flowers


starting to appear within six weeks, depending on the mixture selected. And then a profusion of flowers will be maintained from late spring right up to the first frosts. Trough trials and tests at 18 UK sites


Euroflor has been found to be highly successful on varying ‘normal’ soil types – including loam, sand, clay, stoney and slightly acidic to alkaline soils with a pH of 6 to 8. Tese colourful mixtures have also performed well on steep slopes but here the sowing rate needs to be increased to 5g per square metre to allow for run-off.


Why select Euroflor? Virtually no maintenance is required on the 14 hand-selected mixtures being introduced which include: Ground Cover, Rainbow Annual Display, Drysec, Honey, Spring Flower, Cottage Garden, Sarah Bouquet, Reclamation; together with dedicated Red, Pink, Orange, Yellow, Blue, White – or any mixture of these to replicate a club’s corporate image. Some perennials are included in certain mixtures but annuals and bi-annuals make up most of the species. Benefits over wild flower plantings include the significantly longer flowering period and enhanced flower performance. Scoring high over bedding plants,


Rigby Taylor say carbon footprints will be considerably reduced because of the lower inputs. Tey do not require heated glasshouses to bring on the plants, potting-on, fertilisers or regular irrigation. And on the conservative side, producers say Euroflor mixtures are at least five times cheaper to install and maintain than traditional flower-beds.


development director at Top Green, said: “Tese low maintenance flowering areas are a highly attractive proposition for golf clubs, especially when sustainability and biodiversity are key concerns.” He added: “Tey also provide the most spectacular results.” Justin Austin, course manager at Trethorne


Golf Club, has been delighted with the successful sowing of the Euroflor flower seed mixtures supplied by Rigby Taylor. “Members and visitors have taken great


pleasure from the Euroflor areas,” said Justin. “Enquiries have been received from companies including Walkers crisps and Pepsi, together with individual members.”


Trethorne transformed Trials at Trethorne included extensive plots at the entrance to the club, together with areas of rough and by paths where they grew among natural flower species to add greater colour and diversity of form. “After the initial seed bed preparation and


sowing, the maintenance requirements of these environmental flora mixes are very low,” added Justin. Keith Kemp is head greenkeeper at the West


Cornwall Golf Club. Here the course looks over magnificent views to St Ives Bay and Hayle Harbour and Keith trialled Euroflor flower mixes by the 2nd, 5th and 13th tees, together with a steep bank. He said: “I had to lightly water seed on the steep bank three days after sowing because the soil was drying out there. Te first flowers appeared after five weeks and it was a carpet of flowers within eight weeks. Euroflor changed dull areas into real focal points and the wildlife it has brought in has been tremendous.” GBD


www.rigbytaylor.com


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