As the UK job market and economy continue to struggle, an increasing number of people working in horticulture are finding themselves faced with debt problems. Last year Perennial, the national charity for people working in horticulture and their families, saw a 25% increase in the number of debt clients it helped. The charity also reported a shift toward younger people seeking its help, with 86% of its new clients during 2012 under retirement age.

Perennial provides help and support during traumatic events such as major illness, debt, redundancy, homelessness and bereavement, as well as disability, severe financial difficulty and old age. During 2012, Perennial helped more people than ever, up 7% on the previous year, with a notable increase in clients from the north of England.

Sheila Thomson, Director of Services at Perennial, commented: “We are proud to have helped more people working in horticulture than ever over the past year, but given the current tough economic times, Perennial’s help is needed more than ever. Our clients see Perennial’s help as a real lifeline and, without it, many of them would see no future. The continuation of our work relies on donations and involvement from the horticulture industry and we have many opportunities for horticulture businesses to get involved and show their support.”

Among the horticulture professions helped by Perennial, the highest proportion were qualified and unqualified gardeners who were not self-employed – these accounted for 27% of clients. The next most represented profession was landscapers, which covered almost 22% of people helped. A category that is on the increase is groundsmen and greenkeepers, which now represent over 12% of clients. Another 12% were jobbing gardeners and the remainder was a mixture of estate gardeners, designers, arboriculturists, market gardeners and nursery people.

As well as an increase in numbers, the increase in complexity of individual cases was also very marked in 2012. This has been attributed to the ongoing changes to the benefits system and the impact of the economic downturn on people’s personal circumstances. Perennial caseworkers identified £636,000 worth of benefits that its clients were entitled to and assisted them in accessing these, compared to £543,000 in 2011.

The help Perennial offers includes financial support, debt advice, help with housing problems, care for the ill or elderly and support for children of horticulturists. Each individual’s circumstances are different, but their contact with Perennial usually begins with a visit from a professionally trained caseworker to help find a solution and offer support for their particular situation. Perennial also offers bursaries for horticulture students who are in need of financial support through its Lironi Training Fund.

Originally established as the Gardeners’ Royal Benevolent Fund in 1839, the national occupational charity for horticulturists was re-branded as Perennial in 2003 and now reaches out to anyone who works in horticulture, including landscapers, gardeners, tree surgeons and parks and grounds staff and their families for life.

A lifeline… What clients have said about Perennial:
“To be honest I was at the end of my tether and I thought if this is my life, I don’t want it anymore. Perennial took the rock off me.”

“I don’t know what I would have done without Perennial. I was at the bottom of a pit, mentally, physically and financially. Perennial has been a real life saver for me.”

Get involved:

All of Perennial’s work depends entirely on voluntary donations from the horticulture industry and the garden-loving public. There are various opportunities for horticulture businesses to get involved and help the work that Perennial does, in particular by becoming a ‘Perennial Partner’ or by joining ‘Investors in Perennial’. The work Perennial does also relies heavily on its teams of volunteers and people are being actively encouraged to get involved this way.

For more information, visit: www.perennial.org.uk

Follow Perennial on Twitter: @PerennialGRBS

Votes: 0
E-mail me when people leave their comments –

You need to be a member of Landscape Juice Network to add comments!

Join Landscape Juice Network

Open forum activity

Peter sellers replied to Peter sellers's discussion Retirement advice
"Adam, thanks - how did you arrive at a" notional " value for each client? Did you value each client on say client a pays me 5k a year and multiply it up for the rest? So for example you had 10 clients all paying 5k a year so that equals 50k income ,…"
4 hours ago
David Benson replied to David Benson's discussion liquid moss killer
"thanks for the replies i will have a look at them"
13 hours ago
Adam Woods replied to Peter sellers's discussion Retirement advice
"Hi Peter... sorry been away for a couple of weeks.
So, this is what I did - and it worked.
Made sure I was charging as much as the local market would bear - so I definately was showing a healthy profit - ran the business for near enough a year. Got…"
18 hours ago
Fusion Media posted a blog post
Cold Ashby Golf Centre in Northamptonshire is enjoying some of the best course conditions in its history – and according to Course Manager Ashley Hammond and long-time member Roger Griffiths, Agrovista Amenity has played a big part in that…
21 hours ago
Fusion Media posted a blog post
ICL-sponsored award recognises standards in pitch preparation and presentation across GAA venues in Ireland.Hastings MacHale Park, Castlebar, Co. Mayo has been presented with the GAA National Pitch of the Year 2025 award at the League Final in Croke…
23 hours ago
Anthony Toop replied to Anthony Toop's discussion Servicing battery tools
"Thanks for that, will do.
 "
yesterday
Honey Badger replied to Anthony Toop's discussion Servicing battery tools
"Kma 135r. Take out the drive shaft rod and dip the square end in general purpose grease that will silence it. Machnic at my stihl dealer taught me that. Its worth picking there brains now and then. Also remove the air filter cover clean with a soft…"
yesterday
Anthony Toop posted a discussion
There doesn't seem to be any manufacturer info available with regards what servicing if any is needed for battery tools, not that i can find anyway.When i say tools, i mean things like the motor end of long reach hedge trimmers, and Kombi motor…
yesterday
Fusion Media posted a blog post
ICL-sponsored award recognises standards in pitch preparation and presentation across GAA venues in Ireland.Hastings MacHale Park, Castlebar, Co. Mayo has been presented with the GAA National Pitch of the Year 2025 award at the League Final in Croke…
yesterday
Fusion Media posted a blog post
Pellenc, the pioneer in professional battery-powered tools, is proud to announce the release of the Rasion 3 Easy, a professional-grade 24” (60 cm) self-propelled mower designed to redefine the balance between heavy-duty performance and…
yesterday
Peter sellers replied to David Benson's discussion liquid moss killer
"Pro kleen liquid iron sulphate direct from Pro kleen around £21 for 2x5lts delivered. We put 2.5lts in a 12lt knapsack, thoroughly wet area, avoid hot windy days.
Have used it for years highly recommend."
Tuesday
Martin Ashdown posted a discussion
We chat over knowing your numbers, eating frogs and RASI forms. Please like and share to help us grow this channel.https://open.spotify.com/episode/0PwhpTOoJrhqiyRRK32qM7?si=252f7534...
Tuesday
Dave Colton replied to David Benson's discussion liquid moss killer
"I haven't use liquid iron but do use soluble iron sulphate, takes a wee bit more mixing as it's a powder but I find it goes further and is cheaper than the liquid, I get mine from agrigem."
Monday
David Benson posted a discussion
i have to treat some small areas of lawn with a lot of paving round them and one area there is a swiming pool. my usual way is lawn sand and a broardcast spredder but this is not ideal for this job, what liquid killer do you recomend for a knapsack…
Monday
James Brett liked Martin Ashdown's discussion Two Ordinary Blokes in Business Podcast
Sunday
James Brett updated their profile
Sunday
More…

how good does this look?

Im looking for my first 100 founding members to join and use canopy and i have approx 65 spaces left.. if your in the UK running a garden maintenance / landscaping company and could be intrested , feel free to enter the waiting list.Thecanopyapp.com

Read more…
0 Replies
Views: 44