Garden Cloches Liverpool

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Garden Cloches. You will find informative articles about Garden Cloches, including "Cloches". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Liverpool that can help answer your questions about Garden Cloches.

Buckels Nursery Ltd
0151 5212060
Copplehouse Lane
Liverpool
Liver Building & Garden Supplies
0151 5254080
11 Dunnings Bridge Road
Bootle
Rushton'S Nurseries
0151 9242365
Tanhouse Farm And Nurseries, Runnells Lane
Liverpool
Litherland Garden Centre
0151 9281400
27 Sefton Street
Liverpool
C & D Garden & Pet Centre
0151 2283143
297 East Prescot Road
Liverpool
Sandy Lane Nurseries
0151 5263232
27 Sandy Lane
Liverpool
Ideal Landscape Suppliers
0151 9441964
Penpoll Trading Estate
Bootle
Stanley Gate Nursery
01695 725262
Ormskirk Old Road
Ormskirk
Sefton Meadows Home & Garden Centre
0151 5316688
Sefton Lane
Liverpool
Hartley'S Farm Shop & Nurseries Ltd
0151 5261577
Northway
Liverpool
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Cloches

Cloches

Cloches are mainly used to protect crops in the vegetable garden, although they are just as useful for protecting plants and seedlings during cold weather. There are a wide variety of cloches available, from bell jars and lantern cloches to protect individual plants to low tunnels or tent cloches that protect a row of crops.

Materials

Glass is the best (and most expensive) material, as it has excellent light transmission and allows the frame to warm up quickly in the sun. Clear plastic material is a cheaper alternative, but does not retain as much heat or allow such good light penetration.

Single thickness plastic is the cheapest of the plastic cloches, ranging in thickness from 150-800 gauge. As it does not retain heat well, plastic sheeting is useful when providing protection for plants where high temperatures are not necessary. PVC and polypropylene are thicker and more rigid and can be moulded into corrugated sheets or individual shapes. They both retain heat better than plastic sheeting, but not as well as glass or twin-walled polycarbonate, which offers good insulation and should last for ten years or more.

Cloche Styles

Tunnel Cloche

This style of cloche is typically used to protect crops, and is usually made from a series of wire hoops covered with heavy-duty, flexible plastic. Alternatively, rigid tunnel models are available; although these are more expensive than flexible plastic, they are generally more attractive and are much easier to move around, as they do not need to be dismantled.

Tent Cloche

This cloche is suitable for low-growing plants or for protecting young seedlings. It may be constructed easily using two sheets of glass to form a tent shape.

Barn Cloche

As its name suggests, this cloche is shaped like a barn or a house, with 4 vertical sides supporting a sloping, tent-shaped top. Its additional height makes it handy for taller plants. They are usually constructed from glass or rigid plastic, often with removable or lifting tops to provide ventilation and easy access for maintenance and harvesting.

Individual Cloche

These small cloches are used to protect individual vulnerable plants, either in the early stages of growth or during adverse weather such as heavy rain, high winds, snow or frost. Purpose-built models are available to buy, but cheap, homemade versions can also be constructed from waxed-paper or cut-off plastic bottles.

Floating Cloche

Also known as a floating mulch, a floating cloche is made up of a sheet of polypropylene fibre fleece or perforated plastic sheeting secured over sown crops or even individual plants. The sheets allow air and water to pass freely through to the plants and soil below, but provide valuable insulating properties.

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