from £16.00
The Naturally Grown Green / Golden Cobnuts are available during August and September, and I advise all my potential customers to place early orders to avoid disappointment.
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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.
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from £20.00
A Walnut is an edible nut often encased in a smooth green husk and mainly grown in California, France and Italy. These Walnuts have been specially selected by Potash Farm for quality, size, ease of cracking, and good flavour.
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from £6.50
This is made with the finest ingredients and is especially good with all cold meats and cheeses.
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£21.50
A life times collection was purchased by Alexander Hunt from a family in Bromley and they vary in size, colour and decoration. Many are Georgian and Victorian and make an ideal but simple gift.
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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
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£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.
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£75.00
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.
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from £4.80
Alexander Hunt from the Walnut Tree Company has developed in conjunction with a sustainable innovation farm these easy-to-use natural tree feed pellets.
They are a nutrient rich bio fertiliser pellet made from agricultural crops and residues that have already been used for green power generation.
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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
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