Monday 3 May 2010

Talking gardening, garden shows and gardening


This week has been about gardening - surprisingly enough. Started with talks on climbers at Sunningdale - great weather and great audience - convinced myself that I love climbers - even bought a clematis. Talked about growing Clematis viticella 'Purpurea Plena Elegans' through Elaeagnus 'Quicksilver' - couldn't resist it.
Then to Penny Snell in Surrey - her garden looked magical - lovely audience - talked Adventures in Gardening - plant combinations for impact - a brilliant day finished off with another talk to a lovely group just outside Salisbury - Shrubs - always a favourite topic of mine.

This weekend - Gardening - the big pre-Chelsea onslaught. Tulips looked fabulous - heartwrenchingly gorgeous - heartbreakingly catastrophic when wind and rain broke off some of the doubles. From a distance the garden looks terrific - close up it looks decidedly precarious as weeds grow apace.
Sunday - Bishops Waltham Garden Fair - Lovely event where the great the good and the gardeners turn out to find trusted plants and treasures from great little nurseries and all in a good cause. I love this event, I love the people and I love the plants. Some may be horrified at the idea of a garden centre operator shopping at a garden fair - Sorry, but its different. This is just another facet of the Adventure of Gardening. It sits happily alongside big commercial horticulture - this is a thread of real plantsmanship that is essential to real gardening and pure oxygen to us plant anoraks that cannot live by garden centes alone.

Actually it was just what I needed after Friday - a terrific day pre-Chelsea filming with the BBC. 8 hours for four and a half minutes television. Sounds unbelievable and I can never believe how quickly the time goes, and how long it takes. They have to film every bit from several different angles to make the viewer believe there are lots of cameras rather than just one. Why? I hear you ask - still don't know, but that's how it is. The story - all about the weather - the effects of the cold winter - will it make it - won't it make it - lots of jeaopardy. For those of us involved with the show year after year every season is different, and everyone has its problems - so the weather is always a factor and its not that exciting. I would have loved to have the opportunity to talk more about our plans for the exhibit- the concept of Adventures in Gardening - my objectives - inspiring visitors etc. Anyway - Lovely crew, great day, pleased we'll get some coverage - wait and see!

As I said, the bulk of the weekend was devoted to gardening. Tulips look amazing, Rhododendron Horizon Monarch is in full bloom and overall the garden looks good and the weeds are thriving. Lots of new planting - peas again - first lot did not show -Treasures from the Plant Fair and a few replacements for cistus and phormiums that perished in the winter. We have lots of purple and orange in the garden and, against the fresh green of late spring it is simply mouthwareringly senational. I'd love to say it was all planned, but just like some of the best Chelsea combinations it just happened. - perhaps some intervention from above - who knows but it is simply heavenly.

No comments:

Post a Comment