A ray of sunshine

As 2019 draws to a close it’s a good time to look back at an eventful year. Eventful in the garden that is.

It’s been another year of unpredictable weather - drought and floods, and pestilence, but thankfully no plagues (unless you count the inexorable spread of Chalara, Oak Tree Processionary Moth, Box Tree Caterpillar). Thankfully, the virulent Xylella virus, responsible for the wholesale destruction of Italian, French and Spanish olive trees, has yet to reach these shores.

And still, we garden on. That gardening is good for you has finally reached the consciousness of millennials, mainly as a form of mindfulness. Something middle-aged people have been saying since the year dot…

The gardening year got off to a good start with a reunion with Sandy , Rae and Jo with whom I studied garden design. We’re all still practising, doing slightly different things so it was good to catch up and have a wander round Sandy’s lovely garden.

Sandy's garden Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

It was good to get away at the end of winter to a warm, sunny Barbados. I managed to miss most of the BHS open gardens but the sub-tropical climate means exotic plants grow like weeds, like this East-West Palm.

East-west palm Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

Much of 2019 has been taken up with one large project. The garden was only planted at the end of October so I won’t have any good photos until at least the spring of 2020. I was able to go back to a couple of projects that were completed in 2018 though.

Liatris & Echinops Wimbledon new planting project Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

E’s garden was a replanting project with a couple of minor landscaping adjustments.

Wimbledon garden May 3 Arthur Roadlandscapes.jpg

Whilst J’s garden was a much bigger project. I always enjoy going back to look at completed projects, especially where the clients have taken good care of their gardens. And it’s a good opportunity to see which plants are doing particuarly well, especially if it’s the first time I’ve used them in a design.

Bluebell woods Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

There are two things I must do every May - visit a bluebell wood, this one’s in Berkshire, and go to the Chelsea Flower Show. The 2020 show’s got a lot to live up to but I hope the RHS will make it more accessible to the visiting public.

Andy Sturgeon Chelsea 2019 M&G Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

I was really busy through the summer and autumn which made visiting gardens difficult to fit in. One that I did enjoy though was the Green & Gorgeous Flower Farm in Oxfordshire.

Poppies G&G Flower Farm Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

It’s good to see the growth in British cut flowers, so much nicer and better than flown-in flowers. There’s also an increased interest in growing wild flowers. During a visit to my parents we went to see the wildflower meadow at The Vyne, it was stunning.

The Vyne wildflowers 9 Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

A slow burn project finally started to come together at the end of the summer. I’ve been looking after N’s garden for a few years but it did need a bit of a revamp. We reshaped the lawn and put in a lot of new plants. It will look even better next year but even by early autumn it was filling out.

Tedding garden revamp tree fern Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

This was the first time I’d used tree ferns, I don’t think it’ll be the last.

Tunstall Forest.jpg

At the end of summer I had a few days in Suffolk. The heather on the heathland was in full bloom. I popped into Beth Chatto’s garden on the way home. Despite the hot dry summer it was looking really good, proof that her motto of right plant, right place always works.

Beth Chatto 8 Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

The onset of autumn brought a trip to Scotland to see a friend’s new house on the edge of a Scot’s Pine forest.

Scot's Pines Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

And a return visit to the walled garden at Gordon Castle.

Gordon Castle Walled Garden 1 Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

The last trip of the year was to the Peak District, staying in a friend’s lovely holiday cottage. It was very cold and foggy. Not great for a walk up Stanage Edge but excellent for a photographic ramble down Padley Gorge.

Padley Gorge Arthur Road Landscapes.jpg

By the middle of December you’d think the year would be pretty much done and dusted. It is in the garden.