Still very much winter at Wisley with browns and russets dominating the landscape. Some of the seedheads are tired now but some grasses and seedheads are still effective against the structure of the hedging despite the harsh winter. Little patches of hope arise in Crocus and Helebores.
Icy reflections
Structural hedging
Crocus in dappled winter light
Monarda 'Squaw' still looking good
Saturday, 23 February 2013
Saturday, 9 February 2013
Hadlow
The shoe was on the other foot when I visited Hadlow this week and cursed the students as I couldn't get a parking space. However the Hellebores were looking good, fresh and new and teamed up with Galanthus. I was disappointed to see that they have removed all the beds down the drive. They had Brunnera, Smyrnium, Symphytum and other ground covers here and now just turf. The Japanese garden is finished and looks good, very balanced and calming, although you cannot enter it so it feels a little 'museum'. Some lovely Iris' out in the long borders. Iris reticulata 'Harmony' and 'Katharine Hodgkin' in particular.
Helleborus x hyrbridus
Iris reticulata 'Harmony'
Hellebore and Galanthus
The Japanese Garden
Helleborus x hyrbridus
Iris reticulata 'Harmony'
Hellebore and Galanthus
The Japanese Garden
Emmetts Day 1
After weeks of chaos and crisis but much joy, I find myself at Emmetts Garden in the freezing cold, feeling like the new girl and a bit homesick. But an hour or so later after raking twigs, digging and planting Azaleas, the fresh Kentish wind has blown the cobwebs from my brain and I suddenly realise how quiet everything is.
Pruning the Hydrangea
Hamamelis mollis in the south garden
Ingenious new plant tags
Emmmetts Garden was the home of Frederick Lubbock, an Edwardian plant hunter who planted many rare and exotic shrubs. The highest garden in Kent, it has acid soil and a very sharp wind on its exposed south side. The South Garden is a gallery of these plants and I spent the afternoon here deadheading the Hydrangeas. The Alpine garden is a quarter its orginal size but still demands the most maintenance. The meadows contain tulips and the woodland banks bluebells and these enhance Emmetts' reputation as a spring garden.
Pruning the Hydrangea
Hamamelis mollis in the south garden
Ingenious new plant tags
Emmmetts Garden was the home of Frederick Lubbock, an Edwardian plant hunter who planted many rare and exotic shrubs. The highest garden in Kent, it has acid soil and a very sharp wind on its exposed south side. The South Garden is a gallery of these plants and I spent the afternoon here deadheading the Hydrangeas. The Alpine garden is a quarter its orginal size but still demands the most maintenance. The meadows contain tulips and the woodland banks bluebells and these enhance Emmetts' reputation as a spring garden.
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