Geranium summer twist
- Credit: Enjoy Gardening More
Our partners, Enjoy Gardening More, have hundreds of brilliant offers available this spring and summer to bring your outdoor spaces alive. Whether you have a window box, a few pots on a patio, an allotment or a sprawling lawn surrounded by bountiful raised beds – enjoygardeningmore.co.uk has everything you need.
Paint your garden with colour
These Surfina Petunia plants will keep your hanging baskets looking gorgeous all summer long
- Credit: Phil Anderson
Surfinia Petunia Collection - £14.99 for 18 jumbo plug plants
A best-seller, this classic mix of trailing petunias will provide long-lasting colour in your garden with hardly any effort at all. The plants, in Hot Pink, Blue, Red, Blue Vein, Snow and Sky Blue, will flower from May up to October and are vigorous and disease and weather resistant. Just plant them up, water regularly, and reap the benefits.
Photos courtesy of Starland Yard Patrons enjoy the atmosphere of Starland Yard. Festivities will be held throughout the week of St. Patrick s Day, with music, games and a special St. Patrick’s Day inspired drink menu.
Starland yard has quickly become a local favorite, rolling out a weekly rotation of food trucks and entertainment since the summer of 2019. And with St. Patrick’s day around the corner, they have zero intentions of slowing down.
The food truck park, encircled with colorful, muraled shipping containers, will be getting a head start on celebrations starting March 16. Guests will have a chance to test their knowledge and try to win a bar tab at Tuesday Trivia night hosted by local quiz legend Chris Grimmett. Festivities will continue throughout the week with music, games and a special St. Patrick’s Day inspired drink
The Drinks Business
08 March 2021 By Emily Robotham
While there is still a way to go before gender equality is achieved and sexism is stamped out of the wine industry, the trade is making positive progress towards becoming a more inclusive and meritocratic sector, as
Emily Robotham discovers.
For many who work in wine, lockdown has provided an unsought moment of reflection that has led to important conversations about the opportunities available to women working in the industry, and the intersection between gender, race and new technologies.
In October 2020, a collection of private messages edited to look like a newsletter from an anonymous source using the alias ‘wineb tch’ circulated on Twitter, the provocative contents of which caused offense to many members of the trade, not least those who were targeted in the posts.