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Secret Gardens of the Cotswolds - Book Review & Reader Offer

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Garden visiting takes on a whole new dimension with “Secret Gardens of the Cotswolds” - published this month by Frances Lincoln. This book will whet your appetite for some exquisite private gardens that you will only ever be lucky enough to see if you can get there on the rare days they open for charity. But this is the joy of this book because it takes you behind the scenes and shares the history, planting and feel of each unique landscape through Victoria Summerley’s pen and Hugo Rittson-Thomas’ eyes. 

Victoria Summerley has a relaxed writing style and draws you into every garden in the book. She makes no secret of her desire to look over the garden fence and her love of the Cotswolds. Fellow garden writers and Facebook followers will know we are friends and I make no secret of my admiration for the way she has approached her content. She applauds not just the owners, but also the people who make these gardens work – the stewards who care for them with their extensive knowledge and the gardeners who work there full time.

Hugo Rittson Thomas takes excellent pictures and has graced readers with views of his own garden – Walcot House – although sadly this is one of just six that NEVER open to the public.  Readers will have to live vicariously through his pictures and dream about this garden, which has shades of chateau-style grandeur combined with elements from the Garden of Cosmic Speculation, thanks to its impressive “mound”.

I’ve visited five of  the featured gardens, Two are accessible to the public on a regular basis – Sezincote, near Moreton-in-Marsh, with its irresistible Moghul architecture, but so often overlooked by garden lovers en route to the big Cotswold crowd-pullers – and nearby Bourton House.  Asthall Manor, former home of the Mitford sisters, throws open its doors for a bi-annual sculpture exhibition; Colesbourne Park is about to unlock its gates for its world-renowned snowdrop displays; and Upton Wold is accessible to those who are prepared to join the elitist world of small, private garden tours. 

This is definitely a book to add to your garden library and UK readers can order it for the discounted price of £16.00 including P&P* (RRP £20), by telephoning 01903 828503 or by emailing mailorders@lbsltd.co.uk and quoting offer code APG281. *UK only - please add £2.50 if ordering from overseas.

It makes a good read, is well illustrated and leaves you feeling satisfied to have had an insight into the 20 unique properties within, even if you do have to accept that the chances of you gaining admittance to most of these plots requires incredible tenacity, or friends in the right places.

Powis Castle - spectacular terraces and home to Britain's Hanging Gardens of Babylon

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Powis Castle sits high on a hill overlooking the Severn Valley in Wales
Powis Castle enjoys a spectacular hilltop position overlooking the undulating Welsh countryside. In the past it served as a fortress, built for the Welsh Princes of Powys, but today it is something of a phenomenon, akin to the legendary Hanging Gardens of Babylon, with a series of terraces perched on the side of a hill and spectacular views over the Severn Valley. It is certainly one of the most unusual gardens in Britain and draws hundreds of thousands of visitors every year.
The views from the terraces at Powis Castle are truly memorable
The garden at Powis is a series of terraces filled with extravagant planting, ornate Italianate balustrades and statuary, as well as ancient, oversized, clipped yew trees that add drama to the stage here. The castle dates back to the 12th century, but was added to and extended some 500 years later. The garden there today has its origins in the late 17th century, when William Herbert, 1st Marquess of Powis, employed architect William Winde to create a series of terraces below the castle. But work was never completed, because Herbert was forced to flea to France in 1688.
The Orangery Terrace at Powis Castle 
It was his son, the 2nd Marquess, who commissioned a European gardener, Adrian Duval to complete the garden in the early 18th century and he introduced many of the Dutch influences here, including the Pleasure Garden at the bottom of the valley and a water garden that no longer exists. But by 1770 Capability Brown had exerted so much influence on the way gardens were conceived in Britain, with emphasis primarily on the landscape, that the incumbent Earl of Powis commissioned Brown's Welsh counterpart, William Emes to create the Wilderness area opposite the castle. 
The terraces at Powis Castle were carved out of rock and provide a sheltered habitat for many exotics
More changes were made to the garden under the direction of the Violet, wife of the 4th Earl of Powis in the late 19th century - a keen gardener herself. But, after her death in 1929, nothing changed until the National Trust took over the property in 1952. Since then, it has been turned into a garden to provide year-round interest, although all the original features including ornaments and statuary have been retained. Today the garden is renowned for its striking borders on the 180 metre-long terraces below the castle.
Views from the terraces over the surrounding Welsh countryside are spectacular
What is surprising about the garden at Powis is the large number of exotics growing here. You will find Chusan palms, bananas and cannas in abundance, and even a rice-paper tree (Tetrapanax papyrifer), yet the climate in this part of the country is not tropical. In fact, it is notoriously prone to low temperatures in winter time and heavy rainfall throughout the year. But it is the reflected heat of the terrace walls that encourages these hardy exotics to thrive (and the ability of a committed gardening team to move them to warmer locations during the colder months).

The formal garden and original gardener's cottage at Powis Castle -
today it is available to rent
Another striking feature of the garden at Powis is the topiary, which remains in the mind long after your visit to the castle gardens is over. There are 14 yew tumps (above) on the terraces and they are enormous. So too is the amount of work required to maintain them. It used to take 10 men four months every year to clip all the hedges and tumps by hand, using hand shears, balanced on extremely tall ladders. But today power shears are used and it only takes two men three months to clip the yew. 
    In total In total there are almost 8,500 square metres of formal hedging at Powis and that's in addition to the 7,000 square metres of yew tumps. But modern methods, including the use of hydraulic cherry pickers mean that the task of keeping the yew and box in shape is now manageable.
The formal garden is at the lowest point of the 24 acres of gardens surrounding the Castle - best seen from above if you don't want to climb too many steps on your way back to the car park. There are avenues of apples and pears here, surrounding the former Gardener's Cottage, built in traditional Welsh black and white timber style.  On a cross axis to the fruit trees is the vine arch (above), which was just beginning to show signs of life when I visited in early Many. Later in the season it is a riot of colour.
Look out for the less obvious features here at Powis, like the crested gates hidden at the rear of the terraces (above) and make sure you stroll through the Wilderness opposite the castle. The views from here are also spectacular and you will be able to appreciate the true scale of the terraces from below. There are many specimen trees here, including Californian redwoods, as well as a huge collection of azaleas and rhododendrons, which give wonderful colour in springtime.
Powis Castle and its gardens are open throughout the year (see website for details as winter and summer opening times vary). Admission prices also vary, according to season, but National Trust members go free. Well worth combining with some of the great Shropshire and Herefordshire gardens if you are in the area, including Wollerton Old Hall and Hergest Croft.

Beat the winter blues and catch the best orchids and snowdrops in Britain this February

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Snowdrops at Welford Park, Berkshire © Charlotte Weychan
As we step into February the days are getting longer and there have been some wonderful frosty mornings. Check out any leading garden website and you'll see a wonderful array of glistening pictures as horticulture hacks around the country capture frozen plots and plants on camera. In the south of England we've escaped lightly this winter and although the temperatures have plunged and there have been dire warnings of snow and ice storms, the snowdrops are beginning to appear. For some of the best places to visit to see white gold, click here, but my favourite is Welford Park in Berkshire where you will witness spectacular displays of this hardy little plant from this week. For a comprehensive list of snowdrop gardens around the UK, visit Great British Gardens
'Alluring Orchids' opens at Kew on 7 February - every year the display (2014 seen here) is spectacular
But if snowdrops aren't your chosen spice, head for one of the two orchid exhibitions that are about to open in in Britain. Both Kew and the Cambridge University Botanic Garden offer spectacular displays in their glasshouses during February, opening on Saturday 7th. And there's also the Butterfly Exhibition at RHS Wisley, which runs until early March. This year the RHS is offering timed tickets for the first time to help with queues.

Wordless Wednesday - Perfect pergolas at home and abroad

Wordless Wednesday - Alluring Orchids at Kew - catch them while you can!

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Catch the "Alluring Orchids" display at Kew Gardens while you can. On until 8th March in the Princess Diana Conservatory, there are also three more late opening sessions on Thursdays (pre-booking necessary, see Kew website for details) and workshop and orchid nursery tours. You'll also have the chance to see early signs of spring in the rest of the gardens.

A winter walk at West Dean Gardens - snowdrops, aconites and a sea of crocuses

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West Dean sits at the heart of the Sussex Downs amid acres of rolling countryside


Best seen in winter - the bare bones of the pergola
February is not an easy month to find gardens to visit and although many National Trust properties remain open throughout the winter months, offering wonderful opportunities to stride out across open countryside, it was a real joy to visit West Dean Gardens in Sussex this week, to see the structure of this stunning garden so early in the season. Of course the weather helped and I was lucky enough to have clear blue skies (with an ice-cold wind), but the early signs of spring warmed my heart and there were magnificent displays of snowdrops, aconites and best of all - an ocean of crocuses in the walled garden.
West Dean opened its doors again at the beginning of the month and is open daily in February from 10.30-16.00. Longer hours later in the season.
Snowdrop lovers won't be disappointed if they stride out here, and there are many other gardens with white gold currently in bloom - click herefor details.
Other notable winter gardens in England can be found through this link. The daffodils are also beginning to show their heads in Southern England and the birds are beginning to sing in the mornings, so perhaps spring is not so far away.
February is a good month to see structural details at West Dean Gardens

West Dean's famed walled garden is immaculate and ready for spring

Don't miss the sea of crocuses on display in West Dean's walled garden ...

Wordless Wednesday - the Guggenheim Garden in Venice

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What better to do on a rainy day in Venice than visit one of the few green spaces in this magical city at the Peggy Guggenheim Collection on the Grand Canal? And this is what you'll see ... 

Spring is in the air - great British gardens open their doors around the country this weekend

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With less than a week to go before the clocks change - they go forward an hour on 29 March - there are definite signs of spring in gardens everywhere. There are daffodils in flower all over the country, blossom blooming and trees and shrubs are showing signs of spring growth as more green shoots emerge into the sunlight each day. After the many months of winter, this is a wonderful time to go garden visiting and many great gardens open their doors this weekend.
Great Dixter opens this weekend with its Spring Plant Fair on 28 and 29 March
Great Dixter throws open its doors this weekend with its Spring Plant Fair on Saturday and Sunday (28 and 29 March, 11.00-16.00 both days). Always worth a visit, but plant lovers will find many special treats at the fair this weekend and, if the weather's good, you might want to drop in at Emmetts Garden or take a detour to Godinton House in Kent to see the magnificent displays of daffodils and other spring flowers in bloom.
Daffodils as far as the eye can see at the Valley Gardens
Closer to London head to Valley Gardens, part of the Royal Landscape, to witness daffodils as far as the eye can see (above), or plan a visit to the Beth Chatto Gardens in Essex where there is already plenty in bloom and some magnificent spring blossoms.
Blossom blooming at the Beth Chatto Gardens in Essex
Vann also opens its doors for the season this weekend for a week of spring joy, with the garden open every day from 29 March to 4 April (10.00-18.00) and after that you can still visit this lovely garden on any Wednesday until July.
You'll find incredible magnolia displays at Borde Hill in West Sussex in springtime
Heading towards the south coast you've got a trio of magnificent spring gardens - all visitable in a day and each unique in its own way - Borde Hill, High Beeches and Nymans The magnolias at the first two will bowl you over if you visit soon! But wherever you visit this spring, part of the joy is the fact that winter is finally behind us. 

Wordless Wednesday - Visit Vann this week if you can and see the Gertrude Jekyll water garden

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Time to reflect at Vann - the listed house seen through a glass ball in the garden
Vann dates back to 1546, but was restored and renovated in Arts & Crafts style by W.D. Caroe
Now is a good time to see the structure of the Arts & Crafts pergola
The woodland walk and water garden in March
Fritillaries in flower in the water garden
A fine example of a "crinkle-crankle" wall in the garden
Late-spring flowering (May) at Vann
The water garden in early June
June at Vann ... a mass of flowers in bloom
Vann is near Godalming in Surrey and is open every day this week for the NGS until Sunday - 10.00-18.00. From next week it is open every Wednesday to visitors (10.00-18.00). Admission is £6.00. For a full review and more pictures click here.

Heatherwick's head-turning glasshouses at Bombay Sapphire's new Hampshire distillery

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Thomas Heatherwick's unique glasshouses at the Bombay Sapphire distillery in Hampshire
Thomas Heatherwick - the designer and architect responsible for the sleek and curvy, new red London Routemaster bus and the promised Garden Bridge set to span the River Thames – is no newcomer to the headlines these days. But now you can see another fine example of his innovative designs at the recently-opened Bombay Sapphire distillery in Hampshire, where you will find a bespoke glasshouse complex that will really set you thinking because of its incredible shape and sense of unity with its surroundings.
The Heathwick glasshouses display the 10 different plant species used in the gin production process
Nestled on the banks of the River Test in Hampshire in the apparently sleepy village of Laverstoke, the two Heatherwick glasshouses are home to a range of both tropical and Mediterranean plants used in the distillation of Bombay Sapphire gin. Heatherwick is responsible not just for the spectacular curvature of the gigantic modern greenhouses, but also the conversion and restoration of 23 existing buildings on the site that were formerly a paper mill. Nothing is wasted here and the heat generated by the distillery process is used the warm the glasshouses.
Heatherwick's glasshouse design incorporates more than 1.25 kilometres of stainless steel frames
The glasshouses are a valuable addition to the site and form part of a slick marketing operation to promote the gin that sells in bright blue glass. And, when I visited at the weekend, I couldn't have asked for better weather because the sky matched the colour of the distinctive Bombay Sapphire bottle. The brand owner - Bacardi - has had the sense to turn their main UK gin distillery into a tourist attraction where visitors are offered the chance to see how gin is made; taken on a whirlwind tour of the ingredients used; and then asked to savour the smell of the various botanicals involved, so they can have a tailor-made gin-based cocktail in the bar at the end of their visit before returning to the real world. 
    Garden visitors will immediately recognise the appeal of Heatherwick's glasshouses even if they aren't gin drinkers. They are quite spectacular, with their riverside location and the extraordinary shapes used in their construction. If you check out the Heatherwickwebsite, you will see that: "The finished built structures are made from 893 individually-shaped, two-dimensionally curved glass pieces held within more than 1.25 kilometres of bronze-finished stainless steel frames. In their entirety the glasshouses are made from more than 10,000 bespoke components."

Heatherwick currently sits at the centre of an ongoing argument about the practicalities of his Garden Bridge project, which received the green light from Westminster Council just before Christmas last year. At an estimated cost of £1.75 million, the bridge has been equated to the High Line garden project in New York City, in terms of its visitor appeal, but battles continue to rage about its both its cost and practicality. 
The Bombay Sapphire distillery opened to the public last year and is certainly worth a visit even if gin isn't your tipple. Your entrance fee (£15.00) includes a tour of the site and affords you the opportunity to ogle at the extraordinary Heatherwick glasshouses, as well as a chance to taste the gin that is made there. And of course, there are many other gardens nearby including the Sir Harold Hillier Gardens at Romsey, West Green House garden and, as summer progresses, Mottisfont Abbey - famous for its roses.

Columbia Road Flower Market in East London - a special Sunday outing

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If you're in London for the weekend, where better to head than Columbia Road flower market in the up-and-coming East End on a Sunday morning? Today is overcast, but the flower-laden stalls will brighten your day, as will all the unusual shops in the area. The market takes place every Sunday from 08.00-14.00 and it costs nothing to look. Definitely worth a visit! I came home with armfuls of flowers, costing just a fraction of what you'd pay elsewhere.

"Must See" British gardens - Wollerton Old Hall, Shropshire

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The Rill Garden at Wollerton Old Hall 
Wollerton Old Hall, near Shrewsbury is definitely a garden to visit this year if you can. This unusual four-acre property is a credit to its owners, Lesley and John Jenkins, who bought the house nearly 30 years ago and have created an Arts & Crafts style landscape here in a series of garden rooms surrounding a house that in part dates back many centuries.  But you will have to plan your visit carefully because the garden is only open two days a week - on Friday and Sunday afternoons from 12.00-17.00 - from Easter until the end of September (Fridays only in September), plus Bank Holiday Mondays.
The gardens at Wollerton Old Hall are set around a Grade II listed 16th century house (not open to the public)
Lesley Jenkins spent part of her childhood here when her parents originally owned the property, but they eventually sold up and moved away and when she and her husband John bought it back in 1984, there was a very different garden to the one you see today. Lesley studied Fine Art and has created a landscape with strong architectural lines and colour schemes within a framework of garden rooms that run across three north-south and three east-west axes, allowing striking glimpses of what is beyond. Hedging and paving play an important role in drawing your eye through this garden.
A visit to Wollerton Old Hall in the spring will allow you to see the structure of the garden
I visited in May, but have spoken to colleagues who have gone later in the season and am assured that Wollerton retains its interest throughout the open period because of its imaginative planting. Clipped yew, box and a variety of shrubs give strong structure to the various different garden rooms and the borders are planted with many different perennials that come into flower throughout the season. 
May was a little too early to enjoy some of the garden rooms at their best, but there were plenty of spring bulbs in bloom and with the promise of summer soon, the chance to see the bare bones of this charming garden with all its walls and gates. What really struck me was the vast array of different greens in the spring palette here and the chance to see the promise of what's to come later in the season. So this year, I'm determined to return to Wollerton throughout the open period, as I head to more properties in the north of England and further afield in Scotland, in my quest for new gardens.
The full-time head gardener at Wollerton Old Hall is Andrew Humphris, who worked before at nearby Biddulph Grange. He is helped by part-time gardeners and a team of volunteers. There is also a nursery, stocked with many of the unusual perennials you see in situ here. I left there with a car load of healthy plants which look wonderful at home. Located near Shrewsbury and Market Drayton, there are many other stunning gardens nearby including the Dorothy Clive Garden, and, a little further afield some of the gardens in Herefordshire.
Wollerton Old Hall is a sea of green in springtime
Part of the joy of spring in any garden is the startling array of green you see and Wollerton is no exception, although Lesley and John Jenkins have drawn on their plantsman expertise to ensure that both colour and structure appear throughout the garden whenever you visit. And once you reach high summer, the palette here is very different, with magnificent "hot" borders. 
There is also a series of lectures and classes available at Wollerton throughout the season, giving participants the chance to have a private view of the garden. For further details click on the link.

Wordless Wednesday - Andromeda Botanic Gardens, Barbados

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Welcome to Andromeda Botanic Gardens in Barbados ... a tropical plant paradise
Andromeda was established by Iris Bannochie around her home in St Joseph, Barbados
Follow John's Path through the gardens and discover a world of tropical plants
Iris Bannochie, Barbados' leading horticulturalist, was awarded the Veitch Medal by the RHS in 1977
Iris Bannochie bequeathed Andromeda to the Barbados National Trust in 1988
The gardens are named after the Greek goddess, Andromeda and are tethered to Barbados' coral stone rock




The gardens are an excellent showcase for the island's many exotic trees and plants
Andromeda Gardens are open daily from 9.00 to 17.00

Bluebell bonanza at Hole Park in Kent - catch them while you can!

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The bluebell walk at Hole Park, Kent  is spectacular in April and May
When I glimpse rivers of blue in woodland glades, I know that spring is finally here. This year has seen bumper bluebell crops after an unusually mild winter and the dazzling blue flower is everywhere, basking in dappled sunshine - in verges at the side of the road and every available woodland space. But for a true spring spectacular with bluebells as far as the eye can see, head to one of Britain's best-kept garden secrets - Hole Park in Kent. 
Hole Park is surrounded by 15 acres of formal gardens
This family-run estate at the heart of the Kentish Weald has fine views over the surrounding countryside and one of the finest bluebell crops in the country. The woodland walk is spectacular in springtime, even though many of the azaleas and rhododendrons are yet to flower. And the formal gardens around the house, with 15 acres of immaculately-clipped topiary and green vistas will lift your spirits on any sunny summer day.
The season at Hole Park starts with dazzling displays of spring bulbs
Hole Park is undoubtedly one of the best spring gardens in the country. It opens its doors at the end of March and remains open every day until early June so that visitors can enjoy the spring spectacular, which starts with drifts of daffodils, meanders into a bluebell bonanza during April and May (they are early this year) and crescendoes with azaleas and rhododendrons throughout the woodland valley adjacent to the formal gardens. 
The formal gardens around the house are Italian in style, offset by immaculately-clipped topiary
Immaculately-trimmed yew hedges are another outstanding feature of this Italianate garden, with its fine views over the surrounding countryside. The garden has had time to mature because Hole Park has been in the same family for the last century. It was originally planted by the present owner's grandfather, Colonel Barham, between the two World Wars. Autumn brings another dazzling colour display when the leaves begin to turn.
Acres of bluebells are followed by stunning azalea and rhododendron displays
Walk through the woodland areas and you will be struck by the sounds of birdsong and the delicious smell of spring. And when the bluebells are over, there's still plenty to see and a striking colour palette because of the huge collection of azaleas and rhododendrons, which come into full bloom in May. This is when you will catch the magnificent wisteria in flower too, clinging to the long pergola at the heart of the formal gardens.
In high summer, it's the magnificent borders that give the garden interest, ranging from the tropical hot borders, with their fine vistas over the Kent countryside, to the semi-circular vineyard garden featuring wisteria and climbers. All set against a strong background of geometric topiary shapes, mellow brick walls, classical sculpture and stunning, champion trees, offset by acres of manicured lawns. There is also a water garden and a series of sheltered garden rooms adjacent to the house.
Hole Park is open every day from the end of March until the beginning of June, 11.00-18.00. Summer openings commence in early June, when the garden only opens on Wednesdays and Thursdays, through until the end of October, but with additional Sunday openings throughout October for the autumn colours. Admission is £7.00 for adults. Other notable gardens nearby include Great Dixter and Sissinghurst.

RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2015 - Preview of The Show Gardens

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The M&G Garden - The Retreat designed by Jo Thompson
Royal Bank of Canada Garden designed by Matthew Wilson
Sentebale - Hope in Vulnerability designed by Matt Keightley
Prince Harry reflecting in the Sentebale garden at RHS Chelsea this year
Cloudy Bay Garden, in association with Vital Earth designed by Harry and David Rich
Homebase Urban Retreat Garden in association with Macmillan Cancer Support designed by Adam Frost
The Beauty of Islam designed by Kamelia Bin Zaal
A Perfumier's Garden in Grasse designed by James Basson
The Telegraph Garden designed by Marcus Barnett
The Time In Between designed by Charlie Albone
The Hidden Beauty of Kranji designed by John Tan and Raymond Toh
Viking Ocean Cruises Garden designed by Alan Gardner
The Living Legacy Garden designed by Andrew Wilson and Gavin McWilliam









The Brewin Dolphin Garden designed by Darren Hawkes Landscapes
Healthy Cities Garden designed by Chris Beardshaw
A glimpse of the Laurent-Perrier Chatsworth Garden designed by Dan Pearson
Drizzle with outbursts of heavy rain was the order of the day at RHS Chelsea today, so apologies to my readers for some rather dark images. The 15 show gardens are featured here - in random order - all taken whilst dodging in and out of the rain and trying to get near enough to photograph them, as the show was already crowded at 7.00 am. But the good news is that the forecast is set to improve so many visitors to this years show may be lucky enough to see these gardens in sunshine later this week. When the medal winners are announced later today, I will add details.

Wordless Wednesday - Artisan Gardens at RHS Chelsea 2015

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Best Artisan Garden and Gold Medal: The Sculptor's Picnic Garden by Walker's Nurseries and
supported by Doncaster Deaf Trust
Breast Cancer Haven Garden supported by Nelsons - Gold Medal
Future Climate Info, A Trugmaker's Garden - Gold Medal
Edo Garden by Ishihara Kazuyuki Design Laboratory - Gold Medal
The Evaders Garden by Chorley Council - Silver-Gilt Medal
Brewers Yard by Welcome to Yorkshire - Silver Medal
The Old Forge for Motor Neurone Disease Association - Silver Medal
Runnymede Surrey Magna Carta 800th Anniversary Garden - Bronze Medal
If you're heading for RHS Chelsea this week, don't miss the Artisan Gardens, tucked away at the side of the show - they're a brilliant source of ideas for your own garden, with fantastic attention to detail. 

Great Comp - a spectacular plantsman's garden in Kent

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The gardens at Great Comp were created from seven acres of wilderness by former owner, Roderick Cameron
When you arrive at Great Comp and start walking around the seven acres of gardens, you'd be forgiven for thinking you've stumbled across an ancient site where the owner has made the most of the available landscape around crumbling Gothic ruins to create an unusual garden filled with interesting and rare plants. But the "ruins" were actually created over the years by late owner, Roderick Cameron and his wife and are a clever reconstruction of ironstone rubble found in the grounds of the house they bought nearly sixty years ago. 
When the Camerons moved there in 1957 there was little to see and certainly no garden to speak of - just four acres of land that was hugely overgrown. After 50 years of hard work and the acquisition of adjoining land, the result today is a stunning garden providing year-round interest, with some of the finest magnolias and rhododendrons anywhere in England in the spring, and a collection of salvias that attracts visitors from far and wide in the summer. The "ruins" add interesting focal points to a very personal garden and serve to protect some of the tender plants as well as providing unusual places for visitors to sit and reflect on the lovely garden around them.
Expect to see plenty of rhododendrons in bloom if you visit Great Comp in May
Part of the joy of this garden is its serenity and simplicity. It first opened to the public in July 1967 and remained open just a few days a year for the Gardens Scheme (forerunner of the NGS).  It is now open daily from April to October and because of the Cameron’s foresight in setting up a Charitable Trust, it will remain open, despite the death of its creator, Roderick Cameron in November 2009. Today Curator, William Dyson, who has been at Great Comp for two decades, manages the property and also runs a very fine nursery where you can buy many of the plants you see growing in the garden.  He exhibited at RHS Chelsea 2015 after a break of 11 years and came 3rd overall in the 'Plant of the Year Competition' with his newly-launched salvia 'Love and Wishes'.
The Italian Garden at Great Comp, created by Roderick Cameron from rubble found on site
Great Comp is a very enticing garden, with its many paths curving out of sight and large areas of informal planting. There's an impeccably mown lawn in front of the house, fringed with tall conifers, willows and oaks, and from here different paths lead off into areas of woodland. But everywhere you look there are splendid shrubs, underplanted with hostas, lilies and salvias, and you will find more than 3,000 different plants here as well as the heather and rose gardens, and an Italian Garden with its fine collection of Mediterranean plants. 
The garden is located near Sevenoaks in Kent and is open daily from 1st April until the end of October, from 11.00-17.00, as is William Dyson's nursery. Admission is £7.00 for adults. Events at Great Comp this year include The Changeling Open Air Theatre productions in July and The Summer Show in August, featuring many guest nurseries and unusual plants for sale. Other notable gardens nearby include Hever Castle and Titsey Place.

Swing into summer with a visit to Sussex Prairies - a veritable feast for the eyes!

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The central aisle at Sussex Prairies, with Pauline's metal bison on the horizon
There's no other garden anywhere like Sussex Prairies. This is the largest prairie-planted garden in England and, if you haven't visited before, definitely one to see this summer.  This unique six-acre plot will enchant you, as will the home-baked cakes you can enjoy in the tea shop during or after your visit. Paul and Pauline McBride (who you're highly likely to encounter during your visit) are the brains behind this landscape, which they created from a field at the rear of their home near Brighton in Sussex. 
As you cross the wooden entrance bridge, you realise Sussex Prairies is a unique garden phenomenon
This unique naturalistic garden offers vistas you will see nowhere else, planting that will lift your spirits and plenty of alternative entertainment throughout the summer months including workshops, theatre and music events and, at the end of the summer, a Rare and Unusual Plant Fair (September 6, 2015) that attracts some of the best plantsmen in the country, showing their wares. 
The McBrides planted this garden just seven years ago, but you'd never guess this when you see the acres of plants stretching before your eyes. The planting is naturalistic, in Piet Oudolf style, and there are more than 30,000 plants here, grouped together in swathes of unusual colour schemes and a density that makes you want to wander through the various beds and be close to the flowers stretching out before your eyes (you are encouraged to follow the paths through the beds here ... no signs saying "Keep off the grass" or more importantly, "Don't walk on the beds"). You can even take your "well-behaved dog" with you.
Paul and Pauline met many years ago when they were both working for the Commonwealth War Graves Commission in France, and later went to work for a wealthy landowner in Luxembourg, who commissioned Piet Oudolf, doyenne of naturalistic planting, to design a new border for his garden. It was their time in Europe that ignited their interest in prairie planting and when they later returned home to Pauline's parents small-holding in Sussex, they decided to create their own garden in one of the fields at the rear of the property.
Another unusual feature here is the wide range of sculpture on display throughout the gardens. Pauline is very committed to supporting local artists and every year approaches different sculptors and invites them to exhibit at Sussex Prairies. The result is a constantly changing exhibition and everything you see is for sale. This year, there are also artists in residence at the garden, with a new exhibition in the tea barn.
The gardens open at the beginning of June and remain open daily (except Tuesdays) until the end of October. And although the public don't have the opportunity to see the way the prairie looks in winter, it retains a huge amount of structural interest (particularly on frosty mornings) throughout the depths of winter. And then, weather and wind permitting, Paul and a team of helpers burn it to the ground in preparation for spring. (Click link here to see pictures of Sussex Prairies burning).
Part of the charm of this little stretch of rainbow heaven is the wonderful freedom it gives the visitor. You can wander around the plants and through them, marvelling at the colour combinations and astoundingly abundant planting . Every cultivar seems happily placed and it's the sheer volume of flower heads that are guaranteed to amaze you. There is colour and a strong sense of optimism here. Watch out for all the grasses and rare perennials.
Sussex Prairies is open from June 1st until October 11th this year, every day except Tuesday, from 13.00-17.00. Admission is £6.00 for adults and £3.00 for children (RHS members go free throughout the season). There is ample parking in a field next door to the garden, a tea shop on site and the gardens are easily accessible to wheelchair users. Other notable gardens nearby include Borde Hill and Nymans

To Gravetye Manor born - Tom Coward talks about his first five years in the garden created by William Robinson

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Tom Coward arrived at Gravetye Manor just five years ago, but has achieved remarkable results during his time as head gardener there. He has not only embraced the challenge of restoring William Robinson's former garden to its former glory, but has worked hard with the new owners of the property to find the right balance between allowing the planted areas to progress, while preserving the history and the unique planting style championed by Robinson, who was a vocal and committed advocate of "wild" gardening.

Tom Coward in the garden at Gravetye Manor
with his dog Vera
William Robinson was a somewhat enigmatic figure - a distinguished horticulturalist who wrote prolifically during his 98-year life - and who championed the idea of "wild" gardening and naturalisation of bulbs in both his writing and his own garden at Gravetye. His best-known books: 'The Wild Garden' (published 1870) and 'The English Flower Garden' (15 editions published between 1883-1933) had a huge influence on other gardeners at the time, yet there are no great gardens attributed to him except the one he created at his manor house in Sussex. 

Tom is no newcomer to gardening or writing and contributes a regular column to Country Life. He came to Gravetye from Great Dixter, where he had worked previously with Fergus Garrett and became well-acquainted with abundant perennial flowerbed planting schemes and wild meadows. He arrived shortly after the hotel was bought by Jeremy Hoskings, who saved it from receivership in a last-minute buyout in 2010.
      
When I first interviewed Tom in 2011, as he was settling in to his new post as head gardener at Gravetye, a five-year plan had already been formulated for the gardens, which included restoration of the unique elliptical walled garden and Victorian glasshouses; the planting of many new trees; installing a new pergola and planting thousands of bulbs to allow them to naturalise in Robinson style. His hard work has paid off and today the garden provides seasonal colour and a flowering palette that appears effortless. And although the credit for the gardening goes to Tom, he is adamant that no restoration or progress would have been possible without commitment from the owners, who see the garden as a vital part of the guest's experience.
The original pergola at Gravetye Manor when Tom Coward arrived in May 2010
In reality, this look could never be achieved without the tireless efforts of a team of gardeners under Tom's stewardship. It helps that the owners are firmly committed to restoring the gardens and have had the vision to draw on a number of research sources to reinstate the original Robinson look. Tom has been actively involved in searching archives around the country to find photographs and paintings showing how the gardens looked in Robinson's day, and referred to paintings by Alfred and Beatrix Parsons, which had been particularly helpful during the last five years with reference to plant choices and placement.
The new pergola at Gravetye Manor, replanted by Tom Coward since he arrived
William Robinson moved to Gravetye in 1884 and lived there for the remaining 51 years of his life, devoting his time to creating a well-planned naturalistic garden from the surrounding acres of woodland and pasture, by planting mixed perennial borders and using ground cover plants to hide bare soil areas. He was well known for his dislike of the prevailing 'landscape' movement and wanted his garden to be full of flower combinations, with what appeared to be "wild" planting and drifts of colour. 
The walled garden at Gravetye is elliptical - Tom Coward has overseen its restoration and it now provides much of the produce used in the restaurant, as well as fresh flowers for the hotel
Today the owners are determined to recreate the original Robinson look and Tom Coward is well-equipped to carry out their vision. He agrees that he has an easier job than his predecessor with the wide range of plants available from modern sources, but there were teething problems at the outset because years of neglect meant that the beds adjacent to the house had to be replenished and replanted - no easy task with a constant stream of hotel guests wanting to enjoy the quintessentially English garden on their doorstep.
A typical garden view for hotel guests at Gravetye - abundant "wild" planting and colour
Part of the challenge that he most enjoys is the hotel element of the property. "We're never closed", he says, "but the real joy is seeing guests use and interact with the garden". He is also deservedly proud of the walled garden, where all produce is used by the restaurant and flowers are cut daily for the manor. Not surprising therefore that his gardening team has doubled since he arrived at the manor with so many new projects in progress.
Newly-mown meadow at Gravetye Manor - Tom and his team have planted thousands of bulbs including daffodils, camassias and tulipa silvestris since he arrived
Training is another important part of the garden philosophy at Gravetye. Tom has a constant throughput of trainees from various different schemes including the Historic Botanic Garden Bursary. He enjoys having them on site because he says it's rewarding to see their enthusiasm and how they develop in the unique garden environment he oversees. He thrives on their constant desire to learn and improve and feels that the garden is a particularly good training ground because there are so many different components to it -flower beds and borders, an orchard, meadows, the walled garden and the greenhouses - affording the opportunity to see diversity in the workplace and acquire different skills.
The gardens at Gravetye in September - there's still plenty of colour in the borders
Ask Tom what his favourite local gardens to visit are and he will tell you: Great Dixter, Prospect Cottage and Sussex Prairies. If you would like to visit Gravetye Manor, but have no plans to stay there, the best way is to have afternoon tea. You can then wander the garden at your leisure. Alternatively, head for the William Robinson Festival on Saturday, 4th July from 10.00-16.00. Tickets are £15.00 and all proceeds go to the Chestnut Tree Children's Hospice.
There's little doubt that Tom is doing an amazing job at Gravetye and I certainly look forward to seeing what happens there in the next five years.

Hidcote Manor Garden - Paradise Lost and Found in the Cotswolds

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Hidcote Manor has undergone a £3.5 million renovation programme since the Millennium
When I first visited Hidcote Manor in Gloucestershire several years ago on a hot summer morning in June. It was nothing short of a nightmare! The car park was heaving with coaches, it was over-run with visitors and I came away feeling that I'd been short-changed at a garden theme park ... hustled, bustled and shoved out of the way by foreign tourists desperate to immortalise Lawrence Johnston's iconic Cotswold garden on their memory cards. But if you consider that Hidcote and Sissinghurst are to England, what Giverny and Villandry are to France in terms of drawing garden visitors, it is not surprising. So try and arrive late in the afternoon, as I did this time, at the tail end a rainy day and you might find it more appealing.
First view of the cottage garden at Hidcote Manor as you enter the property
Hidcote has undergone a huge transformation and reincarnation during the last decade, under the stewardship of the National Trust and a committed team of gardeners headed by Glyn Jones. Regarded as one of the most influential 20th century gardens in Britain, it was created by a passionate gardener - Lawrence Johnston - who was no more than an amateur when he arrived in Gloucestershire in 1907. But he became extremely skilled during the 40 years that he lived and gardened here. It was the first property given to the Trust exclusively as a garden, but during the next fifty years of their "parenting", it lost much of the original spirit in which it had been created. 
Lawrence Johnston used hedging and trees to protect his ever-growing plant collection at Hidcote from the winds
As the Millennium approached, a decision was made to restore the garden to the way it was when it was when given to the Trust in 1948. Twelve years and £3.5 million later, Hidcote is back on the map looking the way it did when Johnston left it. The 300-acre estate at Hidcote Bartrim, was originally purchased by Lawrence's mother, Mrs Gertrude Winthrop in 1907, but she had never envisaged a garden here because she was more interested in being lady of the manor. Fortunately, her son had different aspirations and he reclaimed 10 acres from the estate to create the garden that is there today. 
Much of the charm of Hidcote is the vistas through the various garden rooms
Hidcote occupies an unlikely position for a garden of this stature, because it sits on top of a hill overlooking the Vale of Evesham. There was nothing here but fields when Johnston arrived with his mother and the garden rooms were born - using walls and hedging - as a result of his endeavours to provide protection to his ever-growing plant collection. Little has ever been published about him, although he was an ex-patriate American who settled here and fought for his new homeland in both the Boer and First World Wars. He was known as the quiet American, and was the son of a wealthy Baltimore family. 
The red borders at Hidcote are like a firework display
Fortunately for modern visitors, it appears that Lawrence Johnston was an early 20th century plant "geek". He was obsessed both with his garden and plants and travelled widely collecting plants during the 1920s. But equally fortunate was the extent of his mother's wealth, because it would have been impossible to have amassed such a fine collection of plants in those post-war years, without considerable financial backing. He also acquired his second garden property in the roaring 20s - Serre de la Madone - in the South of France, near Menton, and used this as the home for plants that could not survive the English climate. He later retired there because of ill health and today, that garden is also being restored.
Anna Pavord has argued that Johnstone was influenced by the Arts and Crafts movement at Hidcote
With little gossip and nothing more than a couple of letters and diaries left behind by Lawrence Johnston about his life or his garden, it is hard to know where he acquired his sense of design. It has been suggested by Anna Pavord that he was influenced by the emerging Arts and Crafts gardening movement, spearheaded by Edwin Lutyens and Gertrude Jekyll. His close neighbour and friend, Mark Fenwick lived at Abbotswood nearby, and he had plans drawn up by Lutyens for his own garden in 1902. And although Hidcote does not bear the normal hallmarks of the era in terms of pergolas, terraces, urns and ornaments, the massed planting style does. 
Hidcote's Rose Walk offers colour and variety throughout the seasons
The restoration project undertaken by the National Trust at Hidcote has breathed new life into a property that was beginning to look somewhat sad and dishevelled at the end of the 20th century. Fortunately the Trust has had the vision to recreate this important property and restore the original planting plans in the various garden rooms.
The Bathing Pool Garden where the water in the pool
changes colours with the seasons

Although the garden covers only ten acres, there are 28 different garden areas here, each with different themes, ranging from the White Garden to winter borders, the magnificent newly-restored Plant House to a Poppy Garden, and the Bathing Pool garden, where the water changes colour according the seasons, ranging from an icy blue in winter, to the vivid green of high summer. But the master plan is more complex even than the number of garden rooms because to the south of the manor, the different gardens are all on different levels, with paths winding through them and a staggering array of secret entrances through topiary dividers. 
     There is no preferred route around Hidcote - you find your own way through the gardens and try not to miss anything, although a single visit will never be sufficient to take it all in. To the north of the manor, there is a very different feel to this garden, and the magnificent restoration and rebuilding of Lawrence Johnston's famous Plant House is a credit to the National Trust and the plantsmen who keep this garden alive. But whichever route you take, try not to miss anything - there are many hidden corners at Hidcote. You have to start south of the manor because the entrance is through the house, but it's easy to get diverted and miss the north part of the garden.
The Rock Bank has undergone a complete restoration at Hidcote as part of the renovation work
To the north of the manor house you'll find the magnificent Rose Walk, ablaze with colour in high summer; and the welcome shade of the Plant House, filled with exotic plants, overlooking the lily pond, as well as the Kitchen Garden, filled with tempting produce. Elsewhere in the garden, the Rock Bank (above) has also been restored, and although it is early days, given all the replanting, this will come into its own as it matures. Also worth remembering about this garden, is that a change in the seasons will bring about a change in the look of the garden, because it was originally planted to ensure that there was always interest, even in the harsh winter months.
Hidcote is open every day throughout the spring and summer months (April to end of September), from 10.00-18.00. Best times to visit are as it opens or later in the day, if you want to enjoy the garden without too many visitors. Entrance is £10.45 for adults (free to National Trust members). Do make sure you don't miss Kiftsgate Court on the other side of the road if you make the pilgrimage to Hidcote Bartrim.
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