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Anyone Can Garden
Our
correspondent, the legendary gardener Rosemary Verey,
describes how she started gardening with enthusiasm
and a few ideas and suggests you do too.
"You are lucky to live in the country with your own
garden". This chance remark was made to me many years
ago by an unknown lady sitting beside me in a London
restaurant. It occupied my thoughts as I drove home
to Gloucestershire. Like today spring was in the air,
the sun and soil were warming up, and it dawned on me
that our garden must have new beds, new plants, a whole
new look. I remembered the woman's next comment, "My
mother told me that anyone can garden if they love plants."
For several happy years we had lived at Barnsley House
with its nice but ordinary vicarage-style garden; lawn
for dogs and children and ideas from Vita
Sackville-West (of Sissinghurst
fame) that had been added by my mother-in-law. I took
it all for granted. Now suddenly my eyes were opened.
My daughter, Davina gave me an alluringly bound notebook
inscribed 'Your Gardening Book.' My son Charles made
me a member of the Royal Horticultural Society. In my
imagination I saw borders and shrubs, colour emerging
inside our old garden walls. It became an adventure
from which nothing was stopping me except my own ignorance.
I read gardening magazines and spent money on packets
of seeds as well as on graph paper for drawing out rough
shapes for flowerbeds and borders. Articles in magazines
helped me understand about annuals
and perennials
and their flowering times. But most helpful of all was
visiting other gardens, talking to the gardeners, taking
my precious notebook with me and writing down the names
of flowers I liked and how I could see them in the garden
at home.
After my own early efforts I will always suggest that
you choose easy plants for your first border and ones
that like the soil in your garden. I planted euphorbias,
hardy
geraniums, alchemilla
mollis (ladies mantle), astrantias</*P>,
ajugas
and cowslips.
All of these are happy in the lime
soil that we have.
When they began to
flourish the next border had a different flavour, starting
in spring with daffodils
and tulips,
then delphiniums
and asphodels,
pinks,
peonies
and annual echiums.
I also put some shrubs
among them that made the plant groups look a bit more
substantial.
These early borders were not complicated: I used common,
easy to grow plants. But they were my learning curve
and this was helped by ideas from visits to Royal Horticultural
Shows in London and from other people’s gardens
and nurseries. Sherrards was a tree and shrub nursery
near Newbury that had lime soil like us. With their
help I chose and planted my first trees: mountain
ash and whitebeams, which have flowers, fruit and
bright autumn foliage colour. Planted nearly 40 years
ago they have been an increasing joy and I can now walk
in my own little woodland wilderness. It also showed
me that trees in your garden are as important for the
design as paths or borders.
Now it is spring and time to start, so what are your
priorities? Make sure you have the right tools: a trowel
and hand fork, as well as a border
fork, are essentials, secateurs
and a large
sack to carry away weeds. Decide where your compost
pile will be and keep this tidy. Prepare a patch in
a border or bed, old or new, for your annuals and the
new plants you buy. Go slowly and don't worry if parts
of the old bed are weedy, instead concentrate on new
areas. Watch the annuals germinate
and their seedlings
grow, soon their flowers will be ready to pick and have
in the house, your first triumph.
We all have to start somewhere. Years ago I drew rough
plans on the back of envelopes for friends for their
borders when they wanted plants. I still do the same,
so come and see us at Barnsley and we'll help you get
started.
Rosemary Verey's garden at Barnsley
House, Gloucestershire is open to visitors.
See also the Helping Hands workshops:
Planning
a garden from scratch
Planning
groups in a border
Planting
groups of plants
Making
a compost bin
Choosing
your first tools
Click here
to see our Superstore's vast range of plants, tools
and related products
Articles
reprinted with premission from Greenfingers.com

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