The British made Air-Pot container has been chosen by the horticultural experts running a project in Wales to help enrich the country’s native tree and plant populations and boost biodiversity (April 2025).
The initiative in Denbighshire involves a team at a 70-acre tree nursery, a council-owned farm in St Asaph that became a nursery in 2022, harvesting seeds and growing on plants.
Marketing & Sales Representative at Air-Pot® in Edinburgh, Georgie Single says: “We’re delighted that our Air-Pot containers have been instrumental in this innovative Welsh Government-funded project. The nursery at Green Gates Farm has already produced around 40,000 native trees and wildflowers with the help of a small volunteer team and has room to grow up to 300,000 more plants. They harvest seeds from ancient and veteran trees mostly from Denbighshire Council land and also from National Trust properties.
“Our Air-Pot systems were chosen for the programme as they focus on root establishment and ensuring healthier, more fibrous rootstock. Optimum results were Denbighshire’s motivating factor.
“They found survival rates were better with our Air-Pot® grown plants. Plus, the small team doesn’t always have time for potting up which, when using standard containers leads to the risk of spiralling, but not in ours.”
Liam Blazey, Chief Biodiversity Officer for Denbighshire Council, explains: “Currently, sadly, there’s very little biodiversity left in the UK. It ranks 189th out of 218 countries, so from a biodiversity perspective, we’re poor.
“Our project aims to restock some lost species and boost populations that are currently here. The life supported by trees is amazing. While we’ve initially focused on broad leaf trees with Welsh provenance, we’ve also found some rarer trees like Sorbus torminalis, commonly known as Wild Service, Black Poplar and Juniper.
“A single tree is an entire ecosystem and, once it’s planted out, it will live for more than 100 years and the amount of life you can get from that is incredible.
“For us, using Air-Pot containers was all about the health of the plants and the sustainability they offer. They are re-usable many times over with no noticeable wear and tear, and the resulting plants, when planted out, are better able to cope with challenging growing conditions due to the superior root systems they have developed.