
Dunelm is a selling a ‘garden must-have' for 30% less – it's perfect for al-fresco summer evenings
A chimenea has been reduced at Dunelm as part of a summer sale on outdoor products.
This affordable garden addition now has 30% off, with the price slashed from £75 to just £52.50.
1
Dunelm Steel Chimenea
£52.50 (was £75)
BUY FROM DUNELM
Hot temperatures have reached the UK this week, and if you're hoping to soak up the sun until as late in the day as possible, you may want to kit out your garden in preparation.
With the heatwave that's coming up, the nicest time to sit in the garden may well be the evening when it gets cooler.
But evenings can still get a little chilly, so sometimes added warmth is needed - which is where this Dunelm deal comes in.
Similar to a firepit, a chimenea helps add heat to an outdoor area, with the only difference being the shape.
The taller design directs smoke upwards, and sparks are more contained, so it could be a safer alternative to an open firepit - that does also mean that the heat spreads less, so it's best suited to smaller areas.
Not only could this bargain chimenea come in handy post-BBQ when temperatures drop, but it also helps add a cosy atmosphere to a corner of the garden.
Dunelm's is made out of steel and comes with a poker to safely rearrange the coals.
The sale deal is part of a wider Dunelm price cut of up to 50% off across hundreds of garden items, including furniture, ornaments and BBQ accessories.
There's not too long left to shop though, as the sale comes to an end at midnight on Sunday (22nd June).
It's a good time to shop too, with most of the summer still ahead of us, plus this heatwave hopefully won't be the last.
Dunelm shoppers are leaving their praise for the chimenea online, with one calling it ''brilliant'', adding that it's ''effective and easy to assemble''.
Another happy shopper hailed it: ''A garden must-have''.
While a third was just as positive, writing: ''Worth the money, easy to assemble and provides a good heat.''
If you want to keep relaxing on the patio once the sun sets, it's also worth knowing about the best solar lights for the garden you can buy.
Now summer is well and truly here, there's no more time to put off tackling your hedges and foliage, and the GTech Hedge Trimmer has £70 off right now.
Buy Sheds Direct has reduced a 6 x 4-inch shed to under £300.
pair of patio palms, which are half price at Gardening Express.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
31 minutes ago
- The Sun
Huge closing down sales launched at nine Hobbycraft stores shutting in DAYS as part of huge restructuring
HUGE closing down sales have been launched at nine Hobbycraft stores across the UK. The stores are set to close this Saturday, June 21, with the retailers looking to shift as much stock as possible before they shutter for good. 1 Shoppers have a chance to grab arts and storage supplies that have been slashed in price by up to 70%. Sites across Bristol, Dunstable, Borehamwood and Basildon are all set to close on June 21. A further two sites in Essex and stores across Gloucestershire and Kent are set to shut on this date. News has come as a blow to locals, including one Essex local who said "Why are all the good shops going?" Another said the store would be missed and they needed to find another "rainy-day activity". Modella Capital The retail investor bought WHSmith earlier this year and also acquired The Original Factory Shop. At the time, bosses said the shake up would help secure the future of 99 stores and around 1,800 jobs. You can check out the full list of stores earmarked for closure below. Canterbury, Kent - closing June 21 Basildon, Essex - June 21 Borehamwood, Hertfordshire - June 21 Bristol, Imperial Retail Park - June 21 Dunstable, Bedfordshire - June 21 Epping Forest, Essex - June 21 Lakeside Shopping Centre, Essex - June 21 Cirencester, Gloucestershire -June 21 Bagshot, Surrey - June 21 Popular retailer to RETURN 13 years after collapsing into administration and shutting 236 stores The upcoming closures are set to impact around 72 and 126 jobs. Hobbycraft is not the only retailer reducing its store estate. Up to 11 Original Factory Shops stores are to set to close this month, including sites across Worcestershire, Durham and Cumbria. Meanwhile, another five stores across Nairn, Market Drayton, Troon, Blairgowrie and Castle Douglas have been put up for sale. It comes as part of a major restructuring also carried out by new owner Modella Capital with a number of loss-making stores having to close as result. MORE RETAIL CLOSURES Poundland will close up to 68 stores following its £1 sale to US investors Gordon Brothers. As part of the move, its frozen and digital distribution site at Darton, South Yorks, will close this year. Another warehouse at Springvale in Bilston, West Mids, will also shut in early 2026. Around 1,000 shop staff and 350 warehouse workers in the UK will be affected by the restructure, but none in Ireland. Since last March, the budget chain has closed 14 stores, with a nother three set to shutter in the coming weeks. RETAIL PAIN IN 2025 The British Retail Consortium has predicted that the Treasury's hike to employer NICs will cost the retail sector £2.3billion. Research by the British Chambers of Commerce shows that more than half of companies plan to raise prices by early April. A survey of more than 4,800 firms found that 55% expect prices to increase in the next three months, up from 39% in a similar poll conducted in the latter half of 2024. Three-quarters of companies cited the cost of employing people as their primary financial pressure. The Centre for Retail Research (CRR) has also warned that around 17,350 retail sites are expected to shut down this year. It comes on the back of a tough 2024 when 13,000 shops closed their doors for good, already a 28% increase on the previous year. Professor Joshua Bamfield, director of the CRR said: "The results for 2024 show that although the outcomes for store closures overall were not as poor as in either 2020 or 2022, they are still disconcerting, with worse set to come in 2025." Professor Bamfield has also warned of a bleak outlook for 2025, predicting that as many as 202,000 jobs could be lost in the sector. "By increasing both the costs of running stores and the costs on each consumer's household it is highly likely that we will see retail job losses eclipse the height of the pandemic in 2020."


Telegraph
40 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Miliband to open door to North Sea drilling
Two of the North Sea's most controversial drilling projects are set to go ahead as Ed Miliband rewrites the rules on carbon emissions. The Energy Secretary is preparing to change the law on Britain's greenhouse gas emissions, which were relied on by a court last autumn to block Equinor's Rosebank oil field, off Shetland, and Shell's Jackdaw gas field, off Aberdeen. Such a move would pave the way for the construction of the giant oil fields, and possibly open the door for more stalled fossil fuel projects in British waters to be restarted. The two North Sea sites, which were once described as 'climate vandalism' by Mr Miliband, were blocked after environmentalists successfully challenged their oil and gas production licences. Courts in Scotland backed claims that Mr Miliband's predecessors were wrong to approve the projects without considering the greenhouse gas emissions the oil and gas would generate from being burnt. The court ruling infuriated Shell and Equinor, which had already spent hundreds of millions of pounds on the projects, leading to meetings between their top executives and senior ministers. However, the Government is expected to release a draft of its new guidance on how to assess such emissions, The Telegraphunderstands – effectively opening the door for the energy giants to regain their licences and start producing oil and gas. Mr Miliband's Department for Energy Security and Net Zero last night refused to comment on 'speculation' but a spokesman said: 'Michael Shanks, [the junior energy minister] is in Scotland on Thursday and we will say more then.' It is understood that the draft rules will first be subject to a consultation after which companies will be able to reapply for licences awarded before the court ruling. Sir Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves, the Chancellor, have both previously spoken in favour of the projects – despite Mr Miliband's past opposition. Rosebank and Jackdaw are respectively the largest and second largest undeveloped reserves left in UK waters, and could produce oil and gas for the next two to three decades once in production. Jackdaw, a gas field 150 miles east of Aberdeen, is expected to account for 6pc of the UK's entire gas output once it comes on stream – potentially supplying several million homes. Rosebank, 60 miles north-west of Shetland, will produce mainly oil which will be loaded into tankers and mostly exported, with the UK gaining from the taxes it generates. However the new rules could lead to approval for many other such developments, potentially including the giant Cambo oil field controlled by Ithaca, which is also involved in Rosebank. This is because the legal rulings that led to Rosebank and Jackdaw being blocked also froze development of many other UK fields whose licences had been issued under the same flawed assessment system. These are thought to include the next phase of BP's giant Clair oil field and Serica Energy's Buchan Horst field. Martin Copeland, of Serica Energy, said he would welcome any such move by the Government. 'These legal rulings have caused a hiatus across the North Sea,' he said. 'It goes far wider than Rosebank and Jackdaw. There are many other smaller developments that have been held up, impacting the supply chain companies and all their workers.' The Scottish judicial review into Jackdaw and Rosebank followed a previous Supreme Court ruling in a separate case brought by environmental activist Sarah Finch against Surrey county council. Court actions She accused the council of acting unlawfully in allowing planning permission for oil production without considering its climate impacts. The action related to a small oil field near Gatwick airport, but the ruling in her favour had implications for the entire UK oil and gas industry. That result was used by Greenpeace and Uplift, environmental campaign groups, to win the Scottish court actions against, respectively, Shell and Equinor. The judge, Lord Ericht, banned production, ruling that 'the private interest of members of the public in climate change outweigh the private interest of the developers'. That ruling prompted the two main regulators – the Offshore Petroleum Regulator for Environment and Decommissioning, and the North Sea Transition Authority – to pause licensing decisions while the Government drew up new rules for assessing 'Scope 3' emissions – the term for greenhouse gases generated by the end-users of oil and gas products. Last night Ms Finch, said the Government announcement of a new assessment process was long overdue. 'It means Equinor and Shell will have to submit new applications to develop these fields taking full account of all the emissions they will generate, including from burning the oil and gas they produce,' she said. 'We want to see a robust process in full knowledge of their climate impacts.'


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Co-op secures £350m loan from six major banks after cyber attack
Co-op Group has secured a £350million funding agreement with six major banks in a deal the group says indicates 'strong market confidence' in its prospects and resilience. It comes as Co-op confirmed it had finally overcome the impact of a crippling cyberattack, with its 2,300 food stores now trading as normal. Co-Op's chief financial officer Rachel Izzard described the funding agreement as a 'powerful endorsement of strength' after the mutual returned to a pre-tax profit for the first time since 2020 last year. The banks providing Co-op's cash injection are Barclays, HSBC, ING, Lloyds, NatWest and Rabobank. Co-op's credit rating was upgraded by Standard & Poor's in late 2024, and the Group also successfully renewed and extended its backstop undrawn revolving credit facility by five years. In April, the group revealed 35 per cent increase in annual operating profit for last year, with member numbers rising 22 per cent to 6.2million. Nioami Reddington, senior relationship director at NatWest, said: 'Co-op continues to demonstrate strong trading results, a robust balance sheet, growing membership numbers and a resilient operating model.' Co-op has more than 2,300 food stores, 800 funeral homes and a wholesale business supplying approximately 6,000 additional outlets. It employs 54,000 staff and generates annual revenues of more than £11billion. Izzard said: 'This funding arrangement is a powerful endorsement of strength - the renewed financial strength of our Co-op, the strength of our mutual model and the strength of the shared voice of our members.' Co-op's £10 'thank you' giveaway Co-op is offering its members £10 off a minimum £40 shop as a 'thank you' gesture following a major cyber attack that disrupted payments and left shelves bare. The group's stock availability was affected due to the attack in May, and shoppers faced empty shelves because of the continued fallout. Hackers also stole members' personal data, such as names and contact details. Co-op was just one of a number of retailers and other firms to have been hit by a raft of cyber attacks striking the sector in recent months. Marks & Spencer was forced to halt all online orders after a cyber incident in April, which bosses have said was likely to cost the business around £300million, while Harrods was also hit.