£34.95
Three wick orchard pear and fresia luxury candle.
View
£66.50
These trees on average are three years old and are between 1m and 1.5m
high. They are feathered with branches and are ideal for those wishing
to extend their home orchard areas or for pot grown containers on
patios/terraces.
View
from £8.75
This is the first of the Potash farm cosmetics range and is a soap with a lovely fragrance of geranium and Kentish lavender. It's made with luxurious vegetable oils to condition and protect the skin while gently cleansing the surface layer. This allows skin to renew and repair itself from the deeper layers as nature intended. It's excellent for those with sensitive skins.
View
from £6.50
Potash Farm’s Scotch Bonnet Chilli Jelly is our second jelly and it packs a real punch.
View
£75.00
This includes the Cane Hamper Basket, (8 Items) - Fudge, Brittle, 3 X Chutneys, 100g Choc Bar, Small Gift Bags Cobnuts & Walnuts
View
£75.00
The Skeppshult Boom Nutcracker is a fun way to crack nuts, made of walnut wood and a cast iron weight - place your nut in the canister and drop in the weight - give it a shake to crack the shell, cracking nuts has never been so much fun!
View
from £20.00
A Cobnut is a type of hazelnut traditionally grown in Kent. They are
harvested in their green state from mid August and with brown shells and
husks by mid October. All the Cobnuts are sold dehusked from mid October onward.
View
£30.00
These salad servers are made from Kentish hazel trees, which are hand harvested on a coppice cycle. Coppiced hazel is very fast growing and is a strong and light wood as well as being a renewable resource that promotes woodland wildlife.
View
£10.00
Plattinums Kentish Cobnuts are lightly caramalised and enrobed in a 45% Belgian milk chocolate or 70% Belgian dark chocolate, they are a unique product world
wide and as a result of the small area of crops still grown are limited
in supply.
View
from £7.00
"Potash Farm makes lots of lovely things from Kentish Cobnuts - we can't get enough of its, buttery, sweet and salty Cobnut Brittle."
BBC Olive Magazine
View