Escaping seasons of the mind

* I was invited to the press preview for and provided with a pair of tickets to Gardeners’ World Live so I’m marking posts from the show as 'Ad’ - as usual my views and opinions are very much my own. Be sure to check out all of my posts from the show.

In the last of my posts from last year’s Gardeners’ World Live I’m sharing a reflection garden which for me was one of the most thought provoking gardens at the show. It’s designed by Lilidh Matthews and John Tallis and is exquisitely beautiful, even more so when you understand the meaning behind it.

A series of increasing height corten steel posts form a circle around the garden representing time

There are eleven corten posts which represent the ubiquitous architecture of the cityscape, and the garden takes you on a journey through the seasons, illustrating the passing of time. This is done, not only by the change in height of the beautiful corten posts, but also through the changing colours of the planting again representing the seasons.

A closer look at two of the corten steel upside down L shape posts with purple and white planting beneath
Two further reverse L shaped corten posts, these are much smaller and the planting around them is yellow and green

“The garden was inspired by two facts:

  1. 90% of our lives are spent indoors. The central space portrays how we are trapped in a void of our own four walls.

  2. Most suicides happen in the autumn.”

The cracks in the paving slowly grow closer together as you pass through the garden and arrive at the 12 o’clock point; a bench in summer where you can admire all the beauty of the four seasons.

entry and exit to the garden is across three calm stepping stones surrounded by water and edged with small box plants, the centre section of the garden is also paved with a raised central area

It is a stunning garden full of symbolism, but even without knowing the symbolism it would be a great place to spend some time and exactly the sort of space to nourish your mind.

I can’t wait to see the showcase gardens, beautiful borders and everything else that this year’s show has to offer. I’m planning to attend on the first day, and I just know my phone will be full of photos - I’ll share some shortly after our visit on Instagram, but will also start another series of posts from the 2024 show just as soon as I’ve sorted through all my photos!

* With thanks to Gardeners’ World for inviting me to Gardeners’ World Live, it was as fabulous as ever!

The Fontana Garden

* I was invited to the press preview for and provided with a pair of tickets to Gardeners’ World Live so I’m marking posts from the show as 'Ad’ - as usual my views and opinions are very much my own. Be sure to check out all of my posts from the show.

This garden is pretty special, and for a number of reasons. Firstly it’s incredibly striking - though I think the blue skies and warm temperatures helped, but also because it was sponsored by 92 year old Derek Bishop whose lifetime ambition has been to be park of a show garden, but mostly because after the show this garden will live on and was gifted to Cornwall Hospice Care. It was designed by Kim Parish with that in mind, and I’m sure it will be a fantastic space for patients, their families and the hospice staff.

The garden uses clever design to incorporate seating and dining areas, making use of the shaded area beneath its main focus, as well as a water feature which I’m sure will be calming both while it was at the show and in its future location. The planting features alliums heavily, along with tree ferns - there’s something about how they sway in the breeze that’s also calming isn’t there.

purple headed alliums among greenery in one of the beds behind the seating area
A closer look at the space under the raised garden building which holds a dining table for eight, in the foreground there are ferns and to the left a water  feature

It’s funny though looking at these pictures a year on and the structures are not that dissimilar to our new garden - well, except that our garden structures are the garage and trellis around the heat pump, but the ribbed cladding and dark colour is similar-ish!

A bark mulched path with alliums either side leads the way to the black stairs of the fontana's main feature, tree ferns add height and softness either side of the stairs

We clearly don’t have the planting, but again this post is a good reminder to be bold and to use plants we love - that’ll be ferns and alliums on my plant wish list then!

The Fontana Garden is a gorgeous garden though isn’t it?

* With thanks to Gardeners’ World for inviting me to Gardeners’ World Live, it was as fabulous as ever!

The Path of Renewal

* I was invited to the press preview for and provided with a pair of tickets to Gardeners’ World Live so I’m marking posts from the show as 'Ad’ - as usual my views and opinions are very much my own. Be sure to check out all of my posts from the show.

One of my favourite show gardens was this one designed by David Negus which had the main aim of ‘challenging people’s perspectives on materials’ as well as to ‘inspire them to see the potential for reuse and repurposing by showcasing the beauty and benefits of reusing items’. The garden does indeed provide a visually stunning backdrop for the plants - as planned - but also provides spaces for wildlife too.

Scaffold planks stacked horizontally and vertically to provide structure to the edge of the seating area - the seat itself looks like an old radiator on top of scaffold poles.  Sleepers are used to frame the decking area h

For me it was this scaffold plank structure that caught my eye as a clever way of adding something that would give height and structure throughout the year. I loved the detail of turning some planks vertical provided a nook for all sorts of paraphernalia, but mostly because every garden needs somewhere to put your cuppa, doesn’t it?

I’ll admit though I was less keen about it being full of bugs and spiders, though I can see their attraction in such a space!

Wooden uprights of varying heights in the foreground, the borders and decking are behind

What this garden did help highlight for me is that gardens need height. And that doesn’t always need to come from plants. While we won’t be adding anything as near as grand as the scaffold plank shelving to our garden, I think we will be adding something with height - partly for privacy, but also for interest. These simple uprights above show it doesn’t have to be something elaborate, which is food for thought indeed.

A red workman's stop sign bottom right, the light stone path above edges the beds edged with sleepers and iron railway parts

The STOP sign made me smile, as I’m also quite partial to a sign in my garden - though my ‘pool’ sign hasn’t yet found itself a new home here, yet!

A wider angle of the same garden showing the paths, borders and decking area - with the scaffold plank structure in the background

It still blows my mind at how much is achieved by those that build these gardens in such a short space of time, and how ‘at home’ every garden looks too. And then after the show, it’s taken away again though often the gardens find new homes in alternative locations, so very little is wasted.

It’s bonkers though when you think of it like that, but I’m actually glad that it happens and that I’ve been fortunate enough to see many inspirational gardens like this one first-hand.

* With thanks to Gardeners’ World for inviting me to Gardeners’ World Live, it was as fabulous as ever!