Skip to main content

Featured

The Garden House (Devon, England)

The destinations are beginning to blur but looking at the tour guide booklet, I see that we are now in Plymouth. Today, we visited two gardens designed by Keith Wiley.  The first is The Garden House , where Wiley worked as Head Gardener for 25 years (from 1978-2003). The 10-acre estate was purchased in the 1940s by former Eton schoolmaster Lionel Fortescue and his wife Katherine. It was formerly home to the  vicars of Buckland Monachronum. The Fortescue's renovated the gardens and ran a market garden business and raised cattle.  The remains of some of the original buildings in the vicarage still stand in the garden and serve as a romantic backdrop in the Walled Garden - I loved the way they had massed ferns together. Just stunning! Surrounding the walled garden and venturing out away from the house are more naturalistic plantings  - Today, the head gardener is Nick Haworth, who was previously head gardener at Greenway , which we visited earlier.  Keith Wiley lef...

Hope from the Garden


After the horrendous heat wave that hit the Pacific Northwest a few weeks ago, it is not just our gardens and plants that are in shock - gardeners are too. I hear it on a daily basis at the nursery. Shock, dismay, and disbelief. Gardeners are concerned and rightly so.

Despite the ever-changing climate and worries of the world, the garden remains a peaceful escape and a reprieve from ongoing challenges. 

And with all this comes the visual evidence that mother nature has the remarkable ability to heal.

One of the most damaged plants in the garden was the Wheel Tree (Trochodendron araliodes). Though situated in a position where it gets only morning sun, even that was too much for the poor thing. 


 

However, just a few days later, I noticed new leaves beginning to form... 


 

Nearby, a camellia was also burned -


 

But later when I looked at it again, new leaves had emerged and the whole plant looked much better -

 

 

Now on to plants that do look remarkably well at the moment. Fuchsias in the pots got the most damage. Most of the fuchsias in the ground look fine -

 

Pineapple Guava (Feijoa sellowianais) blooming. I still only get a handful of blooms. I wonder if this plants needs to achieve more maturity to be covered?


I love the Butterfly Weed (Asclepias tuberosa 'Gay Butterflies') and so do the bees -

 

Ornamental Oregano (Origanum 'Kent Beauty') and Lavender 'Phenomenal'


 

Peruvian Daffodil (Hymenocallis)

 

My favorite Hosta 'Rainforest Sunrise' -


Hebe 'Sunset Boulevard' and Rose 'Essex' -


Another Hebe that I forget the name of and Cistus 'Mickie' -


I hope your gardens are faring well with the world's nature extremes!


Text and photos by Phillip Oliver, Dirt Therapy

Comments

  1. Isn't it amazing how quickly plants recover (assuming they didn't fully fry)? I think that if they get enough water it can make the difference between making it and giving up the ghost.
    Ornamental Oregano and Lavender make such a soft, nostalgic photo... I love it, well done! I also admire the bird bath in the last photo. Who's the artist?

    ReplyDelete
  2. I an so happy for you that your garden is recovering. Your photography is beautiful.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I’m so glad your plants are recovering from the heat wave. May it ease up for you soon.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment