American Couple Reacts: SHOCKED & AMAZED Seeing A UK Garden Centre For The FIRST TIME!

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  • Опубликовано: 9 фев 2024
  • American Couple Reacts: SHOCKED & AMAZED Seeing A UK Garden Centre For The FIRST TIME! OMG!! This is the REACTION OF ALL REACTIONS from us! This place SHOCKED, MESMERIZED, SURPRISED, AWED AND AMAZED us! The sheer size of it alone was jaw-dropping! As you would say, we were GOBSMACKED! We LOST our MINDS in this episode! We were jealous, angry and excited all in one! Everything you could ever need or want is at this place! We now have a NEW #1 UK Destination on our list and this is it! We should say that we now know this specific Garden Centre is not like all UK Garden Centres. But it's unlike ANY Garden Centre's we have in America! The United Kingdom certainly Beats America on this! And we are super envious! Join us on this episode to watch our heads explode at every turn of this tour of Bents Garden Centre located in Warrington, England. This is EPIC! Thank you SO much for watching! If you enjoy our content, please consider subscribing to our channel, it is the BEST way to support our channel and it's FREE! Also, please click the Like button. Thank you for your support! *More Links below...
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Комментарии • 2,5 тыс.

  • @TheNatashaDebbieShow
    @TheNatashaDebbieShow  4 месяца назад +282

    OMG!! This is the REACTION OF ALL REACTIONS from us! This place SHOCKED, MESMERIZED, SURPRISED, AWED AND AMAZED us! The sheer size of it alone was jaw-dropping! As you would say, we were GOBSMACKED! We LOST our MINDS in this episode! We were jealous, angry and excited all in one! Everything you could ever need or want is at this place! We now have a NEW #1 UK Destination on our list and this is it! We should say that we now know this specific Garden Centre is not like all UK Garden Centres. But it's unlike ANY Garden Centres we have in America! The United Kingdom certainly Beats America on this! And we are super envious! Join us on this episode to watch our heads explode at every turn of this tour of Bents Garden Centre located in Warrington, England. This is EPIC! Thank you SO much for watching! If you enjoy our content, please consider subscribing to our channel, it is the BEST way to support our channel and it's FREE! Also, please click the Like button. Thank you for your support

    • @mzundastud07
      @mzundastud07 4 месяца назад +19

      You should look up Webbs of Wychbold Garden centre too! Amazing place! So much there it’s unreal! 🫶🏼 but no not all garden centres here are on that scale! But I can’t resist a trip to them! Spend a fortune though! 🫣🤣

    • @emmsue1053
      @emmsue1053 4 месяца назад +17

      We go every Christmas, its like wonderland. Very difficult to leave & and control the spending. LOL.

    • @mykota2417
      @mykota2417 4 месяца назад +10

      I'll do our allotment for you in the summer.

    • @louiseb6459
      @louiseb6459 4 месяца назад +5

      @@emmsue1053 I’m going to go next crimbo!!

    • @andygrenville3458
      @andygrenville3458 4 месяца назад +4

      What a great place loved it

  • @charlesverrier4008
    @charlesverrier4008 4 месяца назад +891

    If you like this, wait until you see the Chelsea Flower Show….

    • @lukepooler6155
      @lukepooler6155 4 месяца назад +22

      Always love setting up the stand there. Nice to see people still into there nature and gardens

    • @michellemaine2719
      @michellemaine2719 4 месяца назад +18

      On my bucket list.

    • @poppletop8331
      @poppletop8331 4 месяца назад +12

      I'll bet it's the nicest scent in Chelsea, every time I've visited places in the Chelsea area it reeks of sewage!

    • @neilmorrison7356
      @neilmorrison7356 4 месяца назад +5

      It is fantastic

    • @AM-dz2sh
      @AM-dz2sh 4 месяца назад +14

      CFS is something that you have to attend... there is no point even trying to articulate what a wondrous experience it is.. .. just demand that person experiences for themselves. That is all.

  • @matt01506
    @matt01506 4 месяца назад +766

    I can't believe they didn't have or didn't show any aquariums/fish !
    IT'S A STAPLE OF GARDEN CENTRES !

    • @TheWiseRaven
      @TheWiseRaven 4 месяца назад +39

      I was just about to comment this!! They normally have koi ponds too and you can feed the koi with pellets. I used to tell my mum that I would wait for her in the aquarium section while she spent half the day in Dobbies! Then finish the outing with some food in the restaurant. Then I would spend the whole drive home trying to convince her that we needed a saltwater aquarium at home! 😂😅

    • @peterjemmett6036
      @peterjemmett6036 4 месяца назад +22

      or even small pets

    • @mariahoulihan9483
      @mariahoulihan9483 4 месяца назад +23

      yes.. and sometimes small mammels.. mice, guinea pigs etc.

    • @gillianrimmer7733
      @gillianrimmer7733 4 месяца назад +15

      Yes, There is one on the outskirts of Cardiff that has a massive aquarium and pets section. When we go to babysit our grandkids for the weekend, we take them to look at all the animals and fish - that takes a good couple of hours - like going to the zoo. Then we nip across the road to the pub opposite and have a meal in the pub garden that has play equipment for the kids.- it's a really good day out and all free except the food and drink ( which we'd be buying anyway).

    • @vernonallen3370
      @vernonallen3370 4 месяца назад +16

      These are common place in the U.K. although maybe not on this scale but we have a pretty impressive one near us called Ruxley corner, which is amazing at Christmas time.

  • @gwenowens6727
    @gwenowens6727 4 месяца назад +272

    My son who has Down’s syndrome is recovering from an operation and his first request when home was “to go to the garden centre and see the fish and get a piece of cake”. We do love our garden centre and of course I took him there.
    Love to you both from the UK ❤️

    • @HilaryB.
      @HilaryB. 4 месяца назад +6

      Hope he's doing well!

    • @cyflym11
      @cyflym11 4 месяца назад +6

      My son has autism and he loves to go to the garden centre at Christmas when there are lights everywhere. We have one ten minutes walk away so it's very handy on a rainy Sunday!

    • @tricia9559
      @tricia9559 4 месяца назад +4

      I’m sure the fish and the cake helped in his recovery ❤️

    • @ThornyLittleFlower
      @ThornyLittleFlower 4 месяца назад +6

      My son has Down Syndrome. He loves going to the garden Centre with his nana ❤

    • @lordeden2732
      @lordeden2732 3 месяца назад +3

      A young man with astonishing good and highly discerning taste.

  • @thewanderlusttrio
    @thewanderlusttrio 4 месяца назад +292

    Hi Natasha & Debbie
    We are leaving you a comment to give you both a big thank you for watching and reviewing our Bents Garden Centre video on your channel. Although uploaded on our former RUclips channel. It was still a delight to see your reactions.
    Gary Kershaw told us you had reviewed our vlog, and we were overjoyed.
    Your reactions to the garden centre were hilarious we were all laughing along with you.
    To blow your mind even more we never filmed in the pet store or the outdoor clothing outlet. So actually the garden centre is even bigger than what you have already seen.
    Once again a big thank you for watching and reviewing. You now have three new fans and subscribers.
    Keep an eye on our new RUclips channel. Where we will be uploading vlogs on other days out in the UK and perhaps even more garden centres 😀
    Stay safe and well.

    • @tobiasmills9647
      @tobiasmills9647 4 месяца назад +16

      Thank you for filming this and allowing us to see Natasha and Debbie decide that they're going to move here.

    • @TheNatashaDebbieShow
      @TheNatashaDebbieShow  4 месяца назад +70

      @thewanderlusttrio Hey! We tried so hard to contact you to ask permission to use your video but all your contact info was not working. We're thrilled you are cool with us reacting to your video! We didn't know you had a different channel. Absolutely LOVED this video! Can you email us? We'd love to chat further. Thank you again!

    • @annedoyle222
      @annedoyle222 4 месяца назад +11

      You skipped by the Edinburgh woollen mill,one of the main attractions

    • @VC-gt8fv
      @VC-gt8fv 4 месяца назад +11

      You need to film the Christmas displays. My garden centre has amazing Christmas decorations.

    • @djs98blue
      @djs98blue 3 месяца назад +2

      I found and recommended your video via the N&D FB page after searching for some time on YT for the sort of video that would capture the allure of UK destination garden centre culture. Strangely all the big garden centres brands seem to do a bad job of doing that. I was surprised but very glad N&D watched it and very pleased you liked it too. I’ll check out your new channel too.

  • @janerobinson5944
    @janerobinson5944 4 месяца назад +236

    I am American and traveling to the UK is an “eyeopener”. I have seen these garden centers and they are amazing. The food is top rate along with the clothing. And yes, the plants are great. American open your eyes!

    • @gailcrook2687
      @gailcrook2687 4 месяца назад +4

      Our local one is great but on a hot day it's empty due to no air con and a plastic roof !

    • @gillianclayton
      @gillianclayton 4 месяца назад +36

      OMG! Did an American say some British food is top rate? I passeth out 🎉

    • @DT-us3kd
      @DT-us3kd 3 месяца назад +3

      @@gillianclayton🤣

    • @shirleyhair2261
      @shirleyhair2261 3 месяца назад

      Stop talking and let us see the video

    • @mariahoulihan9483
      @mariahoulihan9483 2 месяца назад

      we do love our quality.

  • @Whippy99
    @Whippy99 4 месяца назад +226

    We Brits love our garden centres. I’ve been known to drive for miles to visit a really good one. At Christmas, they are like Santa’s grotto! 😊

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 4 месяца назад +7

      Yeah for sure.
      I used to think that glass christmas ornaments were long since gone until I saw a huge section of them in one of Cumbria's garden centres last december.

    • @drogna3905
      @drogna3905 4 месяца назад +5

      Oh my goodness! Christmas at a garden centre. Bauble heaven for me!

    • @Whippy99
      @Whippy99 4 месяца назад +2

      @@drogna3905 You should visit Keydells in Portsmouth. It’s off the scale!

    • @drogna3905
      @drogna3905 4 месяца назад +1

      @Whippy99 hmmm, its possible I've been there. I visit my cousin in Fareham every year so we can go bauble hunting lol. So she's taken me to many Garden Centres. But I will mention this one in case I haven't been.

    • @Whippy99
      @Whippy99 4 месяца назад +1

      @@drogna3905 I know Fareham very, very well. 😉

  • @LaraGemini
    @LaraGemini 4 месяца назад +117

    I think our love of garden centres stems from when shops could not open on a Sunday, but Graden Centres could, so they started diversifying. A trip to the Garden Centre is a nice Sunday day out!

  • @domramsey
    @domramsey 4 месяца назад +126

    This might help you understand why we call the outside space around our house a garden when you call it a yard. We're obsessed with gardening and see it very much as an extension of our home. When I grew up in the 80s, we'd travel to the local garden centre one Sunday every month and it was very much an afternoon out, not just a place to shop. They were definitely simpler back then, but I distinctly remember you could by fish, pets, sheds, summer houses and more and then go and chill in the cafe. Mum & Dad would pick up a few plants and we would try to get the parrots to say rude words. Happy days.

    • @Ladiofthewoods
      @Ladiofthewoods 4 месяца назад +9

      @domramsey Here in the US we are obsessed too. Almost 70% of Americans at least have house plants (same % grow food plants too), 55% have gardens and we are obsessed with our yards and tend to spend a lot of time in them and money on them.
      We have plant swaps, seed libraries locally and even community gardens that grow food plants for entire neighborhoods, fruit trees in cities along sidewalks/in parks etc
      On city balconies you will see small gardens, roof top gardens and green spaces inside office/government buildings.

    • @severnsea
      @severnsea 4 месяца назад +1

      I'm not, I hate it. 😅 I do have a few indoor plants though and I do like the garden centres. Never seen one that big!

    • @MawganRogerson
      @MawganRogerson 4 месяца назад +10

      @@LadiofthewoodsThere’s definitely lots of plants and gardening in both countries of course, but in my experience the US is really into big green well-kept lawns with short (and frequently-mown) grass. In the UK we don’t tend to have massive plain grass yards like that, the average UK garden is smaller, more flowery, and often with some fruit, veg, and herbs. The grass tends to be a bit longer too. I understand the suburban aesthetic of the US, but I must admit I like the UK’s more “wild” garden style; much better for the wildlife too

    • @Ladiofthewoods
      @Ladiofthewoods 4 месяца назад +1

      @@MawganRogerson American yards usually do have a lot of grass and they also tend to be large, not necessarily true in suburbs altho those lots might still run large as well.
      I personally do not know a single person that has just grass. Flower beds, garden beds, fruit trees...maybe more spread out than yours but abundant nonetheless. The aesthetic you speak of are usually found in cookie cutter newer developments or specifically used for advertising.
      Not many people are willing to have shadeless, colorless yards that lack personality. Within my personal circle every single plant in our yards has a nutritional/medicinal value. Every flower, tree, plant has a use, even my grass.

    • @monk3yboy69
      @monk3yboy69 3 месяца назад +1

      @domramsey The garden is the front of the house and the yard is at the back .
      The back yard had the pool , the sheds and the kennels for the dogs.
      I grew up in South Africa and that is how we referred to the property.

  • @mikefrombournemouth2942
    @mikefrombournemouth2942 4 месяца назад +175

    I work in a garden centre and yes it's a great to be surrounded by the seasonal planting everyday. Most customers come to meet with friends, have a coffee, a cake, and a mooch.

    • @AM-dz2sh
      @AM-dz2sh 4 месяца назад +7

      lovely... as far as customers go - You have a lovely bunch!

    • @purplefood1
      @purplefood1 4 месяца назад +5

      He i have a lot of memories as a kid going to the local one with my mum and gradma, it was like there were toys or anything but it was still a very fond series of memories... they did have santa's grotto there as well over christmas

    • @renatewest6366
      @renatewest6366 4 месяца назад

      In Australia we call then nurseries or Garden Nursuries very occasionally

  • @user-uw1pe2ho5m
    @user-uw1pe2ho5m 4 месяца назад +181

    This is my local garden centre, it started as one man in a shed by the road, selling roses. now its like a town in itself.

    • @robinsonsarah143
      @robinsonsarah143 4 месяца назад +9

      Where abouts is it in the UK? From Yorkshire would love to visit this place 😍

    • @Lyndahayes
      @Lyndahayes 4 месяца назад +6

      Yes where is this? I must go there immediately!❤

    • @andrewtims9524
      @andrewtims9524 4 месяца назад +7

      ​@Lyndahayes I believe that they said it was Warrington

    • @Lyndahayes
      @Lyndahayes 4 месяца назад +2

      @@andrewtims9524 thanks so much!!!♥️

    • @robinsonsarah143
      @robinsonsarah143 4 месяца назад +2

      @@andrewtims9524 thank u x

  • @alakazoola1
    @alakazoola1 4 месяца назад +41

    The beauty of these garden centers is that they showcase local independent companies x

  • @rachaelwaring9991
    @rachaelwaring9991 4 месяца назад +42

    During the lockdowns in the UK the garden centres were allowed to be open as an essential and they definitely did well as a result. To be fair even small ones have lots of amazing things too….

    • @monk3yboy69
      @monk3yboy69 3 месяца назад +7

      I am a supplier to garden centres ( greeting cards) and during the lockdowns we had sales figures we had never seen before or since.
      It was phenomenal.

  • @user-pq5rp1bc7i
    @user-pq5rp1bc7i 4 месяца назад +181

    Being a German, living in the UK for decades now and watching you Ladies regularly. I'm very fond of this channel. You are utterly charming. Very enjoyable 😊👍

    • @TheNatashaDebbieShow
      @TheNatashaDebbieShow  4 месяца назад +6

      Thank you so much! We're going to be doing Germany on Wednesdays starting some time in March!

    • @user-pq5rp1bc7i
      @user-pq5rp1bc7i 4 месяца назад +7

      @@TheNatashaDebbieShow I am going to watch that, for sure. Germany should be interesting enough, very organised, very clean. A bit too rigid for my liking now." Orders must be obeyed at all times "😁👍along those lines...😉🙃

    • @diarmuidkuhle8181
      @diarmuidkuhle8181 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@user-pq5rp1bc7iPeople tend to expect everyone to follow the law, yes ; which I don't think is a bad thing exactly.

  • @sandraback7809
    @sandraback7809 4 месяца назад +95

    We were doing a day trip on the island of Tobago. While being driven to the other side of the island for a snorkelling trip our driver pointed out places of interest. We were stopped at a junction and to one side was the entrance to a large garden centre. A comment was made on the minibus and our driver laughingly commented how they used to include a trip to the garden centre for the Brits. “You lot really love a garden centre. Trying to get you all out and back on to the bus was like herding cats!”. They had to stop after always being late leaving 😂

  • @diyardley5213
    @diyardley5213 4 месяца назад +44

    We live in Cheshire and we go to Bents quite often. You really need to see it at Christmas - they set up a number of room layouts and include animatronics, such as Santa playing the piano, polar bears, penguins, and so on and it changes each year. Absolutely fantastic, and it's a huge draw. Oh, and the Pet Cafe - they cordon off a part of the main restaurant for people with dogs, so the owners can sit and eat too whilst staying with their pets. The thing about Bents is it's top notch - everything is a little bit more expensive than elsewhere, but it's all top quality, both plants (larger specimens can often come with a two year guarantee, by the way), and food produce. I'd say it's one of the biggest, but by no means the only one. There's another in Cheshire called Bridgemere and it has exactly the same format, but it also has award-winning gardens that you pay a small fee to go round. The gardens alone can take you at least an hour to walk around. Such garden centres, with the miniature golf and concessions stores like Lakeland, Hobbycraft and Edinburgh Woollen MIlls, shoe shops, etc are becoming more the norm here, but I think Bents is the biggest one I've been to. It's regarded as a full day out, and we love it!🤗

    • @ianprince1698
      @ianprince1698 4 месяца назад +4

      when I had my dog, Skippy,I WOULD TAKE HIM to the dog-friendly cafes to enjoy dinner together

    • @colinraxter4004
      @colinraxter4004 4 месяца назад +3

      Webbs near Droitwich is similar at Christmas. Hundreds turn up to watch Santa arrive with reindeer

    • @ebbonfly
      @ebbonfly 3 месяца назад

      Use to love the Christmas ice rink at Webbs pre covid, hope they bring it back.

    • @chris22326
      @chris22326 10 дней назад

      😅 Bents us In Leigh.😅

  • @simongoodwin5253
    @simongoodwin5253 4 месяца назад +62

    Garden Centres in the UK are a day out. It's possible to spend 3hrs plus shopping or not.
    The restaurants are amazing with great food and coffee.
    The clothing range is so upmarket. The plants are also amazing. Christmas is a special time. Usually Reindeer and Santa.

    • @ruthmeb
      @ruthmeb 3 месяца назад

      Our local had [ until taken over by a soulless corporation] a petting zoo and miniature railway plus skating in winter and corn maze in summer

  • @melaniecharlton7121
    @melaniecharlton7121 4 месяца назад +122

    In the uk,most of our garden centres are like this.We have homeware,sheds,conservatories,food,clothes,plants,garden tools,handbags,candles,inside and outside accessories,toys and a lot have play areas for children.Also we have craft areas with yarn,sewing and art accessories.We have great garden centres!😊

  • @molliesmomma
    @molliesmomma 4 месяца назад +73

    Not just older people, my daughter has loved gardens centre since she was about 3 years old. It’s still one of her favourite days out at 23 years old 😍😁

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 4 месяца назад +1

      It's even more of a thing for those of us stuck in housing with either ratty gardens or no gardens at all.
      My dad has always been salty that the next door neighbor owns the entire garden behind our 2 houses and loves a visit to a garden centre.

  • @imagseer
    @imagseer 4 месяца назад +26

    That is definitely a BIG garden centre, but even those on a smaller site will present a similar mix of plants and goods and services, including indoor and outdoor fish keeping supplies. Yes, they have developed as destinations that people love to visit. Some will rent shop spaces to local businesses, and others will have the garden part of business as a kind of after-thought. I'm thinking of Trago Mills in the South West of England, and the national chain of B&M discount stores. Garden centres had their origins from garden nurseries being allowed to trade from 10am-4pm on Sundays, and they just evolved from that. Also the totally ridiculous cost of parking in town centres drove customers to these out of town places, and not having to pay town centre rents and rates helped make the large garden centre business model viable. If you visit holiday destinations in the UK you'll find that many farm shops have morphed into sell-everything-local stores under a large roof. A good example of this if you ever visit Devon and Cornwall is Strawberry Fields which started as a fruit picking place, then a farm shop, and now with a nice restaurant, coffee bar and food hall. I'm not sure how different generations take to these places or if the bubble will burst, but you see families as well as elderly people in chairs and electric scooters enjoying a day out because access is level. At Christmas probably every little kid will want to be taken to a big garden centre to see Santa's grotto and all the colourful lights. The biggest 'garden centre' of all is probably the Eden Project in Cornwall which, at it's outset looked like a colony base under domes on a different planet.

  • @hoppahoppa-yf2pi
    @hoppahoppa-yf2pi 4 месяца назад +47

    Bonjour From France I love your channel and each exciting instalment. WE have garden centres in France, My local Garden Centre sells clothes . plants and garden tools and small animals like Rabbits and Chickens and Hen and Fish even singing birds. They also have food and wine. Very similar to ones in the UK . Jean-Marc , France Merci Natasha and Debbie

    • @AutoAlligator
      @AutoAlligator 4 месяца назад +1

      A few years ago I lived just outside of Paris (I live in England now) and there was an amazing Garden Centre a few miles away...it was spectacular! I'm from the US originally and I love how some Countries in Europe do Garden Centres...it isn't the same across all of Europe but it is very different to the US! :D

  • @CorinneDunbar-ls3ej
    @CorinneDunbar-ls3ej 4 месяца назад +45

    After retirement a great many Brits go to garden centres for days out a couple of times a week. In the UK we have hundreds of them.....plenty of huge ones though most are smaller than Bents. Garden centres are a godsend for retired people. They are warm and dry all through our grey, wet winters, and are a great place to meet friends for lunch or afternoon tea, with plenty to look at as well.
    If you live in a British town, you can rely on having at least half a dozen garden centres within a 20 minute drive.
    In April, Brits go completely mad and buy dozens and dozens of plants. It's a kind of national celebration of Spring! 😍🇬🇧🤩😍🇬🇧

  • @Brian-om2hh
    @Brian-om2hh 4 месяца назад +179

    I'm surprised you are both surprised. We have dozens of these places in the UK.... Some are large places, like this one, others are more local to towns or villages, and may be smaller. The garden centre closest to me, specialises in water gardens, with ponds, rockeries etc. They even sell exotic fish to put in your pond..... The English are sometimes referred to as a nation of gardeners. Here on UK TV, we have a number of specialist gardening programmes offering advice, tips etc, some of which have been broadcast for 40+ years. Some of the presenters of these TV gardening and garden make-over shows are now household names here. Some UK DIY (Do It Yourself home repair etc) chains have a garden section, selling plants, gardening tools etc. Some larger garden centres also have a cafe area..... Some of the garden centres in the UK have large outside areas, with trees, plants, shrubs etc, all on display in a natural setting. Some often sell sheds and garden landscaping supplies......

    • @marycarver1542
      @marycarver1542 4 месяца назад +11

      trip to the garden centre these days, is often half a day at least , including lunch in their restaurants
      and looking around before buying the plants etc. we came for !

    • @trickygoose2
      @trickygoose2 4 месяца назад +13

      ​@@marycarver1542some people go to garden centres just to have a meal.

    • @lynnepashley4281
      @lynnepashley4281 4 месяца назад +11

      Dozens you mean thousands

    • @pmfg875
      @pmfg875 4 месяца назад +2

      ❤💯

    • @gavinspence2381
      @gavinspence2381 4 месяца назад +3

      The British are described as a nation of gardeners! Have you ever heard of Beechgrove?

  • @grannyof12kids
    @grannyof12kids 4 месяца назад +23

    I'm an Aussie and I want that garden centre too...

  • @W124phreak
    @W124phreak 3 месяца назад +6

    When she said, "My Mom would have loved that" about the cottage ornament with the water wheel and ducks 🥺❤

  • @NailHeavenAshford
    @NailHeavenAshford 4 месяца назад +85

    My son, as a 14 year old used to come with me to the supermarket and find the deadest (is that a word-probably not) most crispy, mouldy, and unwatered plant he could on the sale rack and ask me to buy it. He took it home and within a month it was a triffid. He managed to do it to every single plant he picked out despite their original condition. He’s now nearly 22 and living the other side of the country in uni accommodation but I’m sure he still has a plant somewhere.

    • @MrPaultopp
      @MrPaultopp 4 месяца назад +4

      I always collect the dead and dying plants in the plant hospital section …..always revived them

    • @Peter-uw5cq
      @Peter-uw5cq 4 месяца назад +6

      When I bought my 1st house the local garden centre allowed me to go through their scip as I explained to them I was a skint but would return when not, when I sold the house the trees and shrubs I rescued were a established garden.

    • @AM-dz2sh
      @AM-dz2sh 4 месяца назад

      LOVE this...

    • @CharlesWyatt-cg5qs
      @CharlesWyatt-cg5qs 4 месяца назад +5

      I did the same. I found a shrub at this very garden centre thirty years ago that was ready to be thrown out. It looked almost dead, so I bought it, and after three years it practically took over a corner of the garden. I chopped it down two years ago because I had grown tired of it and wanted to plant something different for a change.

    • @AmethystDew
      @AmethystDew 4 месяца назад +1

      I hope at some point he gets a good job to buy the house of his dreams and gets to design his own garden. So he can enjoy looking after his plants inside and out. There is nothing like it for relieving stress and feeling good.

  • @rosalindyates7331
    @rosalindyates7331 4 месяца назад +46

    Even Brits who don't have gardens love going to garden centres. Lol

  • @curlygirly5478
    @curlygirly5478 3 месяца назад +10

    Hi guys, love this video. Im British and i definitely take this for granted that most garden centres here have lots of other bits as well as plants. Lovely to see your comments and reactions.

  • @malc568
    @malc568 4 месяца назад +9

    We love our garden centres here in the UK 😊

  • @suzannebaxter2888
    @suzannebaxter2888 4 месяца назад +35

    In the UK there are over 30 million people who are gardening fanatics. They say it's about 42% of the population but they don't take into account those who have allotments or gardens on a balcony but they are gardeners. My love of gardening started at the knee of my grandfather who was a miner he spend all day every day down in the bowels of the earth. So he combined two of his greatest loves. Gardening and model trains. He had already built in his attic a to die for trainsets from the Flying Scotsman to the Orient Express which also had a huge diorama interspaced it was beautiful, When he run out of space he started combining his garden into a real life diorama.
    He belonged to a group of gardeners that grew the huge veg and I was blown away. My garden is in 2 acres of land and split into sections. It's taken my husband and I thirty years to get it like it is. I have orchards and an area that is just wildflowers. A rose garden, I also grow about 70% of what I eat. I also live very close to Sandringham and they have many gardening themed weekends I mean the gardens of Sandringham are simply stunning. They sell seeds of nearly everything they grow.
    English people especially are so proud of their gardens that many many villages have open gardens. They charge a small fee and the money is usually raised for a charity they have picked that year. I live with in 5 to 10 miles from 7 different garden centres. One specialises in just Irises another specialises in African Violets. We also have a Japanese garden place and I truly truly love that place what he can grow is truly astonishing. He he has weekend and teaches you how to care for any plants you wish to purchase.
    My husband and 3rd son are Bonsai addicts between them they have over 250 of them and in the village that I live in we hold Orchid weekends. To put into perspective Brits spent £110 billion on home improvements during the coronavirus pandemic, standing at £2,000 per person for home and garden renovations and with that discovered that they not only liked gardening they loved it. The funny thing with me though is my gardens are my pride and joy but if I bring a house plant into my home it dies. I have yet to keep one alive except for my carnivorous and I have many of those. Helps with the fly problems. Also very impulsive viewing to see them perform.

    • @chixma7011
      @chixma7011 4 месяца назад +5

      I’m the same! I can grow absolutely anything out of doors including plants from the ‘dead and dying’ section of a garden centre. I stuck a 2-inch bit of variegated foliage from a small bouquet directly into the ground under my kitchen window and it took off and covered that section of wall within a few years. House plants are a different matter entirely; they just keel over and die out of pure spite. 😢

    • @suzannebaxter2888
      @suzannebaxter2888 4 месяца назад

      My compost is full of my dead indoor plants. @@chixma7011 I do exactly what they tell me to do. I think it's telling me to stick to the one outside and stop been greedy.

  • @alisonwhyte8885
    @alisonwhyte8885 4 месяца назад +39

    Places like this were a godsend when my mum was in a wheelchair, it didn't matter if it was raining we could stay insrde and looke at the different departments, have a coffe and a meal. Look in the greenhouses and just have a grat day out.

    • @nolajoy7759
      @nolajoy7759 4 месяца назад +4

      I noticed there was a good amount of disabled parking..something I need myself ..and good space in the aisles

  • @rebeccacondon1729
    @rebeccacondon1729 4 месяца назад +10

    Our local Garden Centre has separate small stores, a pet shop, butchers, bookshop, fish, and a mobility/disabled store, plus the rest, smaller than Bents but still very similar.
    Another one about 30 minutes away is larger and again is similar. It also has an Owl and Bird of Prey centre inside, owned by a friends son. They kindly took me there to fly some Owls and other birds of Prey as a birthday surprise.

  • @patdelaney191
    @patdelaney191 4 месяца назад +108

    A garden centre with plants only is a nursery 👍

    • @northernlady212
      @northernlady212 3 месяца назад +9

      A Nursery should grow a large majority of the plants they sell

    • @zoecrozier6564
      @zoecrozier6564 3 месяца назад +6

      Yes nurseries you can buy bulk bedding plants at a decent price. Larger shrubs and bulk buy trees etc. Or you have specialist nurseries that deal with just one type of plant . I love garden centres ❤

    • @user-lb3hd7ip4o
      @user-lb3hd7ip4o 13 дней назад +1

      No garden centre sales lots of other things beside plants a nursery just sales plants.

  • @normanwallace7658
    @normanwallace7658 4 месяца назад +39

    Look up Blooms of Bressingham Norfolk they are Nurserymen for other garden centers suppliying them thr plants, but the massive site has 3 narrow gauge Railways full size locos, Vintage & Vetran Fire Engines & a massive colection of Steam Road & Agricultural Traction Engines & a Steam "Galloper" Fairground Roundabout!! What more could you want?? & the narrow railways run through the fields where the seed plants are growing!!

    • @acommentator4452
      @acommentator4452 4 месяца назад +5

      they also have static genuine steam railway engines in a shed. amazing place

    • @aoc092
      @aoc092 3 месяца назад

      Wow, that sounds amazing 😍

  • @nancyrafnson4780
    @nancyrafnson4780 4 месяца назад +66

    I love the British “understatement” by the couple who made the original video!!

  • @deebee192
    @deebee192 4 месяца назад +9

    I love UK and Irish garden centres, they are fantastic.

  • @TheChrissywhissy
    @TheChrissywhissy 4 месяца назад +18

    I live just outside London there is a road full of garden centres, they are all different. Another big Garden Centre near us called Van Hagues had a mini zoo as well and a little train to take a ride on.

    • @jackieup6041
      @jackieup6041 4 месяца назад +2

      Is that Crews Hill Enfield? Fantastic place.

    • @TrelvisGresley
      @TrelvisGresley 4 месяца назад +2

      @@jackieup6041 It's in Amwell between Hoddesdon and Ware. The train ride is great fun.

    • @TheChrissywhissy
      @TheChrissywhissy 4 месяца назад +2

      @@jackieup6041 yes Crews Hill is the Road with lots of garden centres and Van Hagues is in Great Amwell Ware

    • @leahthomas6759
      @leahthomas6759 3 месяца назад

      I use to live near Van Hagues 😊

  • @patterdale4332
    @patterdale4332 4 месяца назад +71

    The biggest one is Bridgemere Garden Centre,there are lots of these types of centres all over the UK

    • @TheNatashaDebbieShow
      @TheNatashaDebbieShow  4 месяца назад +27

      There's a bigger one????? 😮

    • @kirstenjacobs3607
      @kirstenjacobs3607 4 месяца назад +12

      Bridgmere is a ace, it's a nice place to idle away a Sunday and had a fab butchers

    • @user-is9ci4te4x
      @user-is9ci4te4x 4 месяца назад +9

      I used to go there a lot (some of my friends worked there) . we used to like the aquarium section and water features.

    • @tgcrowson
      @tgcrowson 4 месяца назад +11

      Best of all, the Bridgewater canal goes past Bridgemere and we have moored up for a couple of days to visit

    • @craigbirks7075
      @craigbirks7075 4 месяца назад +3

      I live about 10 miles from Bridgemere and used to go regularly with my mum and dad but haven't been for many years. The massive Coi pool was a favourite

  • @lindakirk698
    @lindakirk698 4 месяца назад +32

    I love seeing how shocked you are. Now you know why they were popular in Lockdown when no other shops were open! The number of birthday presents & xmas presents that were purchased is unbelieveable!

  • @Kissameassa538
    @Kissameassa538 4 месяца назад +7

    When you two look at each other… the love in your eyes is beautiful. I love you two. 🇬🇧❤️🇺🇸

  • @aecides3203
    @aecides3203 4 месяца назад +4

    This is something I'd never really thought about growing up, but it's a valid point - British garden centres are weirdly expansive. And they're entirely right - the place I used to be most excited to go to as a kid at Christmas was the local Garden Centre - they decorated all of the plants, the interior section had lights and model trains with a christmas themed track, it was amazing.
    But yes, British garden centres go far beyond the scope of gardening - they often include anything and everything you could possibly need to enjoy your garden/summer from camping gear to hobby craft stuff to small pets. It was the go to place as a kid for seeing the fish, getting high quality warm/waterproof clothes at decent prices, looking at camping equipment (you could usually get that cheaper elsewhere) and having a really nice lunch or slice of cake, then heading to the little craft shop to look at all the beads and other supplies. It was also the kind of place that was strangely unifying - EVERYONE considered it to be a pleasant trip. You could ask your Nan to take you as a kid, or if your parents were watching you and a school friend for a while after school (while their parents were stuck at work, for example) you could take them to get some tasks ticked off of your list while getting the kids fed and having them actually excited to go.
    I think the fact that they're often in the countryside areas outside of towns allowing them more space than usual, combined with the fact that people looking for things to garden with will inevitably also want somewhere to sit to look at their garden when they're done, something comfortable and durable to wear while gardening, decor, things to do in the garden, maybe even a nice book to read etc and that when you're spending that long shopping you naturally want a place to get a drink and a bite to eat, allowed these places to organically evolve into stocking the entire range of niche items under the category 'outdoors' that you usually have to go to specialised shops for and, by pure coincidence, became a destination for a nice afternoon out at the same time.
    It's less common, but I've been to garden centres that set up 'biomes' - they climate control the 'greenhouse' sections as well as regulate the humidity and have small areas which grow more temperate or tropical plants and give you 30 seconds of feeling like you're in a rainforest as you walk through.
    To answer the question "Are they all like this?" - Yes and No? They're mostly all as expansive in what they cover, and have been since I was a kid in the nineties being taken there at the weekend, but this is definitely a more upmarket one which has more space devoted to the food section in particular than most (generally they have a nice cafe and something resembling a small farmers market of local produce they stock). This particular example has taken the general model used by a British garden centre and said "Let's do that, but bigger, better and fancier".
    Most garden centres, for example, do not have eight hundred parking spaces.
    But they ARE all crammed with everything you could possibly put in a garden.

  • @LilMonkeyFella87
    @LilMonkeyFella87 4 месяца назад +90

    I think the concept of gardening is very British. Theres lots of TV shows centred around gardening. The most famous is probably Gardeners World, which has been on since the 60s. Some others are Ground Force and Garden Rescue, which they do up someones garden for them and give helpful tips and ideas

    • @kitchfacepalm
      @kitchfacepalm 4 месяца назад +5

      Certainly there are similar outlets in both the Netherlands and France.

    • @barneylaurance1865
      @barneylaurance1865 4 месяца назад +13

      And there's Gardener's Question Time on the radio, which has been running since 1947. Generally recorded in a different past of the country every week.

    • @mysticpizza02
      @mysticpizza02 4 месяца назад +4

      The Beechgrove Garden in Scotland.

    • @Brian-om2hh
      @Brian-om2hh 4 месяца назад +2

      The concept of gardening is in deed a fairly British trait. Even hundreds of years ago, the very wealthy would have landscaped gardens around their large country houses. And if you were anyone, you got a fellow named Lancelot Brown to sort your garden out.....a very Capable chap, was Mr Brown.

  • @MillerWright-mb1ob
    @MillerWright-mb1ob 4 месяца назад +32

    In the late twentieth century, only garden centres and small stores selling perishables were the only places allowed to open on a sunday, even chip shops were closed. So garden centres became a to do on a sunday, and their roles and what they sold got a little stretched with the result that you see in the video. Even the idea of it being an out door activity store is a little stretched. Most of the displays would be concessions, so Lakeland is a kitchenware shop with it's own on line presence but shops usually in garden centres.
    A lot of the diversification is driven by the need to cover the autumn and winter when a garden centre that only sold plants would do zero business. I'm surprised it doesn't have an area selling tropical fish, cold water fish and other small pets to attract the kids.

  • @gvigary1
    @gvigary1 4 месяца назад +5

    As @LaraGemini mentioned, until 1994, a lot of stores weren't allowed to open on Sunday, but Garden Centres were. They started with garden furniture, garden toys, outdoor clothing, and so on, things that were at least tangentially linked. But over time, they've become like mini-malls as you see here, with a lot of things with no real connection to gardens.
    This one is at the larger end, but certainly not unprecedented. There are a couple near me that have coach tours running to them.
    You should also check out Trago Mills, which is kind of a mix between a big box or outlet store and a garden centre but has rides for kids including a working steam railway, and a petting zoo with free-ranging peacocks!

  • @kimshayler4501
    @kimshayler4501 4 месяца назад +10

    I am a Brit who is now living in Cyprus and I miss SO much about the UK, so to watch your reaction videos is like putting on a warm, cozy blanket and feeling I'm home!! Thank you! Another thing -------- I am completely, totally, utterly IN LOVE 💕 with your meditating poodle on your bookshelf. I love ALL things DOG, and he is so gorgeous. Please tell, where did he come from and have you had him a long time??

    • @TheNatashaDebbieShow
      @TheNatashaDebbieShow  4 месяца назад +3

      Thanks so much! In regards to our meditation doggie, not a poodle. We actually have 2. One in our bedroom, too. Unfortunately we bought them from a store that went out of business a few years back

    • @kimshayler4501
      @kimshayler4501 4 месяца назад +1

      Awww, enjoy them both!! Many thanks 🐕🐩

    • @janlucas3373
      @janlucas3373 4 месяца назад

      I live in the south of England and have never seen a garden centre like this..we have them on a much smaller scale and mostly plants

  • @tonyhartwell7605
    @tonyhartwell7605 4 месяца назад +33

    Love how you have a green thumb, here in the UK we'd say we have 'green fingers' if we're good with plants.

  • @frankdoyle9066
    @frankdoyle9066 4 месяца назад +37

    Thanks Ladies as always. British garden centres really did work it out right. They capitalized on the Brits love of gardens especially with our short growing season. The weather!!!!!! And decided to make them into a "destination" event. You should see them at Christmas.

  • @Stephen-Fox
    @Stephen-Fox 4 месяца назад +5

    As someone in the UK who used to be taken to a garden centre fairly regularly, nothing surprised me about the place in terms of _type_ of things on offer, but the _size_ of it did. (actual plants are typically in a nursery section; garden furniture and decorations typically dominate the main garden section; there's also usually a large variety of garden rocks and gravels available based on the ones I'm used to). But basically, take what you saw in the video, divide it by... 8? Maybe 20? And that's more in line with what they usually are. Especially for the indoor area of it.
    ...OK. Slight correction. The mini-golf surprised me.
    But, yeah, in his later years of life my dad was still going to (well, eventually being taken to) the garden centre just to visit the tea shop and have a bit of a couple of hours out when he wasn't up for being taken somewhere for the day. Even the smaller ones tend to be nice places to visit. Just... For an hour, maybe two, rather than on the scale of that one.

  • @WomanNextDoor
    @WomanNextDoor 4 месяца назад +5

    Your reactions were pure joy.
    Thank you for cheering me up on this chilly, rainy, Winters day.

  • @adrianmcgachie
    @adrianmcgachie 4 месяца назад +26

    UK garden centres are generally a really great day out, with the variety we have and many with plants, indoor shopping and cafes and restaurants as you saw, but even my jaw dropped at the size of that one! Like they say in the video, they are often worth returning to at Christmas for the wonderful displays and Christmas gifts / decorations etc

  • @zinnia2980
    @zinnia2980 4 месяца назад +52

    I love visiting the garden centres💚🌿. My favourite one has an art gallery and expert craftspeople showcasing their exquisite work. Of course the many local food outlets are great amongst the gorgeous scenery and plants 💚

  • @nannyogg2586
    @nannyogg2586 4 месяца назад +8

    I think British garden centres are a great example of how people in this country manage to stay in business by diversifying. They're really more like emporiums these days; an Alladin's Cave of delights. It's a bit like the mysterious 'Middle of Lidl' (if you haven't, check it out) - where you go in for a tin of peas, and come out with a 4-man tent!
    PS A lot of British garden centres have their own nurseries. Nurseries are where the plants are grown; some nurseries sell direct to customers, others supply those garden centres which might not have their own nursery. I hope this clarifies things a bit :)
    Thanks for your videos, I love to see Britain throught the eyes of others and your reactions are as interesting and educational as they are entertaining (without being disrespectful or judgemental). Keep up the good work! x

    • @nannyogg2586
      @nannyogg2586 2 месяца назад

      @DementedDaveH Zackly! And not just the winter months - most garden centres have pretty good cafes as well, which are great for those numerous days when rains stops play lol

  • @victoriasheridan1
    @victoriasheridan1 3 месяца назад +3

    I'm in UK .... this is a normal type of garden centre ... its a place to go for a walk around and have tea and cake with friends. The gardening area is usually outside and includes fencing and slabs as well as furniture. They have workshops and events and if enough room outside will have rides for kids Christmas is crazy fun.
    We have nurseries but they are usually just plants and quite small so we go for cheap plants to nurseries and they often need TLC
    Most nurseries supply councils and cater for the road way decorations etc but the public can go and buy the leftovers very cheaply.
    Lakeland is a popular kitchen store in UK and sells great stuff.
    basically a garden centre sells quality goods and its great fun and educational . they'll havbe people explaining things like insect hotels and how to create a floral decoration for your table centre etc.
    Very popular butchers and groceries are from local farms and there are imports from european delis.

  • @whatsgoingon4815
    @whatsgoingon4815 4 месяца назад +37

    There are lots of garden centres like this all over the country.

  • @valproton3841
    @valproton3841 4 месяца назад +23

    It's very typical of a British Garden Centre, even the smaller ones have an indoor section that sell things like that. This is one of the bigger shops, a super store that sell a larger variety of goods. Most of them have some sort of cafe where you get refreshments and food. Most sell pond equipment, pond fish and aquatic plants, also tropical fish, aquariums and plants. Some have small pet animals and birds plus all the gear needed for them. All of them will have garden plants, compost, pots and fruit trees, the bigger ones will sell hot tubs, greenhouses, sheds, sculptures, ornaments, fencing and garden machinery, even small tractors. Some sell camping equipment as well as garden furniture.

  • @dafyddrhobert2414
    @dafyddrhobert2414 4 месяца назад +4

    Most garden centres have outdoor furnishings, decorations, and clothing as well as plants, different composts, and outdoor-related tools. Pet-related goods are common together with things to attract wildlife into the garden. Some household goods and food items are sometimes found. Quite a lot have cafes.

  • @JulietVorster
    @JulietVorster 4 месяца назад +3

    Almost every time we go visit our mum we go to a garden centre. Every area has multiple different garden centres. From where my mum lives there are 4 within a 30 minute drive. Most are not quite this big, but they usually have retail concessions (shops within shops), like the one in the video. They all have at least a cafe, some have a full restaurant. Many do senior citizens lunch or dinner specials. Most have loyalty programs, offering discounts and free beverages. Some have play areas for the kids, but I’ve never seen crazy golf at a garden centre before. I only know of one locally that has a butchers within it. Garden centres are a big thing, not just with older folks. Our 31 year old daughter often takes our grandson to local gardens centres.

  • @phoebebrown2883
    @phoebebrown2883 4 месяца назад +20

    A lot of the food items you will probably find are owned by either local firms or small firms in the UK.

  • @Jaynesherwood
    @Jaynesherwood 4 месяца назад +5

    I love your channel and imagine my excitement when you had Bents on your show, I live right next to Bents and my hubby and me go for scones and tea all the time xx ❤

  • @honeybee4423
    @honeybee4423 4 месяца назад +3

    We have an awesome garden centre like this about 5 minutes away from where I live and now they are building another one literally next door! My husband hates any form of shopping but never says no to a garden centre- we Brits really love our gardens and our garden centres. Love to you both Xx

  • @johamlett27
    @johamlett27 4 месяца назад +24

    You picked the best one, in my opinion, for your first UK garden centre reaction

  • @appytight8468
    @appytight8468 4 месяца назад +12

    In her "twilight years" there was nothing my late mother enjoyed more than a day out at a Garden Centre. A wander around the gardens, plants, displays and other offerings and attractions, some gentle shopping, somewhere to get a nice lunch and afternoon tea, all under one roof. Bliss.

  • @philrob1978
    @philrob1978 4 месяца назад +3

    This was brilliant, you two are great. I went there many years ago, it's delightful to see how, one - it's still going, and two - how much its grown! What a place!

  • @aw8585
    @aw8585 4 месяца назад +5

    Hello from Scotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 It's my first time watching you guys. Love it!! Me and my kids love a jaunt to a garden centre too.

  • @robertwatford7425
    @robertwatford7425 4 месяца назад +19

    I'm not a gardener but I loved this video because of your reactions. I just happened to pause it when you first saw the plants and 'gobsmacked' perfectly describes the look on both your faces. Your obvious joy and wonder is infectious. Thank you.

  • @susanashcroft2674
    @susanashcroft2674 4 месяца назад +42

    I can vouch that Bents is HUGE and was so pleased to see my town on the board for local produce sold there. The Christmas displays are something and a lot of people buy in the sales as it can be expensive.

    • @lee-annenavin3391
      @lee-annenavin3391 4 месяца назад +1

      Me too 😊 so happy to see Fitzpatricks from Haslingden on there ❤

    • @bigal3055
      @bigal3055 4 месяца назад

      Bents is alright, but it's got no miniature steam railway. I mean, what kind of self respecting garden centre doesn't have it's own on site rail network? It'd be like going to one, only to find that they hadn't got any books on the development of the tank through the decades, lead crystal glassware sets, or packets of locally produced oak smoked back bacon. Can you imagine? There'd be riots within a week!
      No railway indeed! Bent's is barely more than an oversized B&Q Garden and Outdoors aisle.

    • @wetcardie66
      @wetcardie66 4 месяца назад +1

      big shout out for Haslingden

    • @KamBoomBap
      @KamBoomBap 4 месяца назад +1

      They have a great beer selection, sometimes that's the only reason I go there 😂

  • @SettleinSpain
    @SettleinSpain 4 месяца назад +4

    loved watching this, i haven't been to a british garden centre for years and they are lovely. Used to take my mum to our local one for lunch and a day out. Next you must find a video of a the garden centre at Christmas... they blow my mind EVERY time!

  • @MrPaulMorris
    @MrPaulMorris 4 месяца назад +17

    Part of the reason for the expansion and diversification of garden centres dates back to the days before the relaxation of Sunday trading laws. Up to the early 80s shops were, with a few exceptions, prohibited from trading on Sunday. The exceptions were generally logical: newsagents, petrol (or 'gas') stations... and nurseries. So long as they were 'predominantly' selling garden products they could open on Sundays.
    As the centres were, for obvious reasons, out of town, it made sense to add a café. Then maybe some gardening clothes (boots, waterproofs etc), DIY tools, garden furniture... Since you're selling food in the café the obvious next step is to have a range of local produce to take away.
    Then throw in some cookware, maybe toys to keep the kids entertained and suddenly garden centres morph into these retail destinations.
    Not all garden centres are as big as the one seen here but there is a tremendous variation; one centre I used to visit with my mother sold poultry--as in live hens, geese and ducks rather than meat in the chiller! They also sold tropical fish and small pets.

    • @gennytun
      @gennytun 4 месяца назад

      Thanks for explaining the history and context of how these places have developed. I hope Debbie and Natasha read this comment.

    • @JohnVilla1960
      @JohnVilla1960 4 месяца назад

      I remember to get around the Sunday trading laws, traders would sell you an onion for £10 and you get a free spade if that's what you wanted to buy. A carrot for £100 and a free lawnmower.

  • @patterdale4332
    @patterdale4332 4 месяца назад +23

    The biggest one is Bridgemere Garden Centre,there are lots of these types of centres all over the UK,I think it's the biggest in the world I no it's the biggest in Europe

  • @philipking6590
    @philipking6590 4 месяца назад +1

    I'm guessing this is one of the biggest, but part of their popularity came from the changes to the Sunday trading laws where garden centers got an exception to open all day. Now most garden centres have an indoor area with a cafe and BBQ, outdoor furniture, outdoor clothing something for kids etc its a weekend day out.

  • @landyandy270
    @landyandy270 4 месяца назад +3

    Bents was my local garden centre until I moved away nearly 20 years ago. It was impressive then but I’m astonished to see it now. 😃

  • @dyson37
    @dyson37 4 месяца назад +25

    Greetings from Stoke-On-Trent the home of pottery. I didn't know about this garden centre but after looking it up on Google its actually not far from me so I am going to pay the this place a visit when the weather gets a bit better as were coming to the end of winter here in the UK. Thanks Ladies for this and keep up the good work.

    • @kerraig666
      @kerraig666 4 месяца назад +2

      The one at Trentham isn't too shabby

  • @andrewcoates6641
    @andrewcoates6641 4 месяца назад +27

    Can I suggest you take a look at the annual flower festival and parade of decorated floats that take place in a small town called Spalding. It’s an area that is responsible for raising and growing most of the flower bulbs that are sold as British grown bulbs. The fields surrounding the town are filled with the bulbs that are being grown for sale plus the laboratories where they are trying to develop new varieties of flowers for colours and form(ie multiple heads). All of these nurseries are trying to find plants that they can take out a patent on and the most sought after single colour is a pure black bloom.

    • @nigelbundy4008
      @nigelbundy4008 4 месяца назад +2

      Also there is The Chelsea Flower Show in London.

  • @etet9393
    @etet9393 4 месяца назад +1

    As someone who lives quite rural, garden centres have regularly been the place for me and my friends to meet up for a coffee and a wander even in our 20s. There is something for everyone of all ages!

  • @Peter-gv6vf
    @Peter-gv6vf 4 месяца назад +2

    This looks like a very nice hypermarket with some plants attached outside. We have a garden centre near here which admittedly doesnt have anything like the indoor shopping here but, absolutely dwarfs this place for space outside devoted to plants only. It is absolutely enormous, it must take 25 minutes walk to get from the front entrance to the furthest reaches of the outside plant sale area. Checking out can take anything up to 45 minutes because of the queues and amount that people buy. Its practically American in scale.

  • @heatherjardim3878
    @heatherjardim3878 4 месяца назад +10

    Bents at Christmas is out of this world!
    You need a whole day there, and you still won't everything.
    The restaurant is also amazing, as is the food hall.

  • @wildwine6400
    @wildwine6400 4 месяца назад +45

    Oh what a great idea for a video! I recognise that place immediately! 😃, its 10 minutes from my house 😅. Bents is HUGE now, the original Bents used to be barely the size of a 7/11 in the early days. It's been part of the community for over 80 years now. I think it was one of the countries first garden centres too. The area it is in has lots of neighbouring farmland , made of small villages like Croft which are great for pub grub! Kenyon Hall Farm is nearby too which sells local produce and offers fruit and veg picking.

    • @lesleyfarrington4809
      @lesleyfarrington4809 4 месяца назад +2

      And loads of coffee shops and restaurants up the road in Culcheth

    • @wildwine6400
      @wildwine6400 4 месяца назад +2

      @@lesleyfarrington4809 definitely. I like Newton Le Willows. That has lots of nice cafes like Mamma J's and What's Cookin’. Theres also a plant themed restaurant in Warrington called The Botanist. Well worth a visit

  • @PurdyBear1
    @PurdyBear1 4 месяца назад +1

    My local garden centre has a pet section, out door and indoor furniture, garden statues, fountains, indoor decor, a restaurant, cafe, food hall, books, stationery, clothes, kitchen stuff, kids toys and nursery. Oh and the plants of course. A great place.

  • @barbarafruitbat1245
    @barbarafruitbat1245 4 месяца назад +2

    I don't live far from this Bents Garden Centre! It's a beautiful place, lovely staff, fantastic food and loads of stuff to look at. Their Christmas displays are just out of this world!

  • @chrisharrell2449
    @chrisharrell2449 4 месяца назад +5

    Garden centres are very famous in UK for Granny sitting. An expression for taking your elderly parents out during the midweek for a meal. Plus, a wander around if. they're up to it. and not too frail.

  • @bethcushway458
    @bethcushway458 4 месяца назад +19

    I'm so happy you love our garden centres😊 They're such an integral part of life over here.
    Since I was a little kid we would go to the garden centre at least once a month and just mooch around. It's something I carried on with my kids. It's lovely, relaxing family time and holds a lot of nostalgia for me❤

    • @jamesward3547
      @jamesward3547 4 месяца назад +1

      Yep. I grew up going to garden centres and have been going throughout my life. I even used to go there when I had a flat and no garden just for a mooch about. Everyone loves a good garden centre :)

    • @bethcushway458
      @bethcushway458 4 месяца назад +1

      @@jamesward3547 they're great aren't they?😊

  • @TermiteVideo
    @TermiteVideo 3 месяца назад +2

    We have Garden Centres and Nurseries. A GC is like Bents and a Nursery is just plants and accessories for planting without the all the other attractions. You should see the GCs at Christmas, they are spectacular!

  • @Denathorn
    @Denathorn 4 месяца назад +1

    For me, in my area, the equivalent would be a Dobbies garden centre, which does contain a lot of stuff, not as much as this place, but it goes above and beyond your typical "nursery", but then, smaller nurseries are a great way to while away a couple of hours, and usually, their coffee and cakes etc etc go beyond anything you can get from Starbucks or Costa, like, you can get slices of cake that's 6" tall, or corned beef and potato slices as thick as kerbs...
    Honestly, they are amazing places, large or small.

  • @kathchandler4919
    @kathchandler4919 4 месяца назад +24

    The Tebay centre they talk about is a motorway service station in Cumbria, just over the border from Northumberland & I shop there, it's a beautiful farm shop & does the original sticky toffee pudding, from (& invented in) Cartmel, Cumbria 😊

    • @CorinneDunbar-ls3ej
      @CorinneDunbar-ls3ej 4 месяца назад +3

      Tebay does BRILLIANT breakfasts. And it's so scenic!

    • @dasy2k1
      @dasy2k1 4 месяца назад +2

      They also have a sister site on the M5 at Gloucester (I believe the owners are related)

    • @kathchandler4919
      @kathchandler4919 4 месяца назад +1

      @@dasy2k1 wouldn't know, just know Tebay is part of a massive farm & is very much more than a service station to us, in fact, it's ridiculous to call it that , I spend hours a time there , it's in such a stunning area 😀

    • @kathchandler4919
      @kathchandler4919 4 месяца назад

      @@CorinneDunbar-ls3ej isn't it though? I agree about the breakfasts too ❤️ ❣️

  • @shaneraven2621
    @shaneraven2621 4 месяца назад +10

    So surprised you don't have any like this the majority of garden centres in the uk are like this,
    Really enjoy your videos guys and respect to our cousins across the pond, from Somerset 😊

  • @ameliagfawkes512
    @ameliagfawkes512 4 месяца назад +2

    This is very similar to our local garden centre up here in Scotland. Busloads of pensioners come for days out. You can get everything from food to garden buildings and they grow a lot of their own plants to be suitable for the climate here.

  • @susanhill2110
    @susanhill2110 4 месяца назад +3

    There’s an American family that live here that go all over the country and they visited the Scottish garden centre and it was stunning. We have a garden centre in Nottingham and it’s stunning at Christmas. I’d suggest looking for the Scottish one which also has a farm attached and a Camel 🐪 outside. The plants are usually outside. They usually have pets and an aquarium in these centres.

  • @lorraineyoung102
    @lorraineyoung102 4 месяца назад +8

    Wowzer, I live in the South of the UK and yes we have both small and large garden centers/plant nurseries near by which have all the elements of this shopping experience but the sheer size of this place is gobsmacking 😮 (and I should say the mini golf is a new one on me⛳ 😁 I'm seriously thinking of booking an airbnb just to visit! Best of all I love that this is still owned and run by the founding family! 👏👏👏

    • @debbee0867
      @debbee0867 4 месяца назад

      I was going to say something similar, we have more scaled down versions of this garden centre down South, with similar offerings. Around the local area where I live, we usually have a Maidenhead Aquatics and Pet Store tagged on as well. That garden centre blew my mind!

  • @nickskidmore6011
    @nickskidmore6011 4 месяца назад +12

    This place is about 25 minutes from my home and I have spent many a happy hour or six just wandering around it.
    I hope this couple do one at Christmas cos the place is just magical. We took our two year old granddaughter and the joy and excitement on her face was absolutely heartstoppingly brilliant to see.
    The biggest bonus is that the plants are really good too
    I hope you get over here as I would love to take you there
    Nick

  • @Tom-ku3bf
    @Tom-ku3bf 4 месяца назад +1

    Garden centres in the UK are now like a shopping village or destination. It’s quite common to have many areas including clothes, farm shop, homewares etc. outdoor furniture is sold in pretty much most of them and then you have all your plants and bulbs. It’s only plant nurseries that just tend to sell plants.

  • @BaneHuntress
    @BaneHuntress 4 месяца назад +1

    The only gargen center near me that's not chancged since I was a kid in the 80's is Riggs in Todmorden. it STILL has large rooms filled with indoor and outdoor plants. it's always had garden furnitcher and outdoor garden stuff like anything made of storn or outdoor pots, and 2 rooms dedicated to plant care. it also used to have a coffee machine, something unheard of in the 80's. now it also has a little pet care center, fish, a huge room of stuff and plastic plants.. didnt have any clothes in it when I went last year :P

  • @takedashingen2834
    @takedashingen2834 4 месяца назад +14

    I've got a couple of big Garden Centers, a couple of medium-sized ones and several smaller ones within a 15/20 minute drive from where I live. They're a great day out and we always come back broke. 😂😂😂

  • @suegermaine5730
    @suegermaine5730 4 месяца назад +5

    I remember many years ago my friend Annie took me to this Garden Centre and it was run by this gentleman his wife and young children. I had my shopping list two shrubs a Daphne and a Philadelphus plus some plant food. Annie didn’t say much as she wanted me to be surprised! I got one small trolley and went inside. I was overwhelmed. It was only 7:30 am and the restaurant opened at 8. By the time we got to the restaurant for 8am our one small trolley was full! We hadn’t been to the plant section yet! We had a full English Breakfast with a pot of tea. We decided we needed another much later trolley. We then shopped some more and got our plants however by then it was 13:30 so we then stopped for lunch. After lunch we checked out some of the clothing franchises the butchers. I remember spending over £200 I was mortified, so there is a big downside to these Garden Centre you spend way too much and buy too much. It’s still fun though lol.

  • @MrAdeyb1971
    @MrAdeyb1971 4 месяца назад +2

    I visit a few garden centres by where I live weekly. I can take my dog in all of them, they have dog friendly areas in the restaurants. They have aquatic sections with tropical and cold water fish and all the equipment needed. You should see garden centres at Christmas time! They are like winter wonderlands with everything you could possibly buy for Christmas. I've been to a garden centre with an ice rink, Ferris wheel, German Christmas market, pet sections selling everything from parrots to gerbils and snakes. And all garden centres do afternoon tea! I've even gone to one with a fairy glen around a large lake, another has a conservation area that used to be part of large statley home estate. Trentham Gardens in Staffordshire still has all the layed out gardens that were kept after the house was burned down, they also have a outlet shopping area. Garden centres are everywhere and keep me and my mom busy. You must try afternoon tea at a garden centre!

  • @user-yk1cf8qb7q
    @user-yk1cf8qb7q 4 месяца назад +1

    Our local Garden Centre is smaller but similar with a wide range of goods, plants and a restaurant. It was started by an individual who was one of the sons of a large building company. Its pet centre also had an aquarium sector where you could get both freshwater and marine fish, as well as equipment for the home aquarium. There are quite a lot of centres similar to this around the country. we have several within a few miles of us in the English Midlands. My son worked there as a part-time job at weekends and school holidays (he was 12 years old when he started) when it first opened and ended up working in the restaurant and was often left in charge on the tills.

  • @littleannie390
    @littleannie390 4 месяца назад +9

    Not all garden centres are this big. We have a couple of quite big ones close to us but not to this scale. Most tend to sell plants and tools, home and garden decor, garden furniture, garden buildings, giftware, clothing, some food and an aquatics centre and pets section. (for some reason they didn’t show these). They all have restaurants or cafes. A lot of people go to the garden centre for lunch and once inside you can’t help but be tempted by everything else. They all have big a Christmas section every year with all things sparkly.

  • @segazora
    @segazora 4 месяца назад +4

    I feel like garden centres in the UK are the equivalent of a shopping mall for the older people who can’t travel as far and want to go at their own pace.

  • @Golightly354
    @Golightly354 4 месяца назад +2

    The owner of Bents Garden Centre (John Bent) was a good friend of ours and he went out with a teacher at my school (my mum worked at the school, that's why we knew a lot of our teachers personally, they all used to come around for parties, which did my head in as a teenager). He was round our house a lot and was a 'down to earth', kind man. Their relationship didn't last as she was a nutter but my parents still stayed friends with John until they passed away. The garden Centre at that time was in Glazebury (i remember being bore on the car ride as it is so flat around there!)

  • @PaulEcosse
    @PaulEcosse 4 месяца назад +3

    I think those who are fortunate enough to have gardens, east atlantic side, they do tend to make the garden more of an extention of the house. If we're lucky to have a little bit of space to ourselves then decking, patio doors, patio furniture and tending to our gardens so that we might enjoy them for the five days of sun we get every year, it all seems worth it.

  • @lougriffiths
    @lougriffiths 4 месяца назад +6

    I am from the uk and that place is enormous