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Back from the dead
THREE Wentworth elm saplings have been planted in the grounds of the Palace of Holyroodhouse, Edinburgh, and on the Highgrove estate in Gloucestershire-29 years after what was thought to be the lastknown Wentworth elm died.

A man among men
What makes a master? Beloved of the commercial art world, handled warily by art historians, the word has long been opaque. Michael Prodger investigates its many meanings-and discovers that being male confers an unfair advantage

Unearth one of life's luxuries
Black diamonds are a girl's best friend this Valentine's Day, with Périgord truffle-based skincare from TRUFFE

Adventure awaits
Spend an unforgettable family holiday on the Benmore Estate and experience some of Scotland's finest wildlife and sporting activities

Let the art rule the head
Despite being a world leader in everything from jewellery to fashion and music, the UK is failing to nurture creativity at school and in regional centres. Tristram Hunt, director of the V&A Museum, calls for an urgent review

And that's how it's done
A Narable-and-livestock farm in the CotsAwards, wangiovestock own the combine a commercial French partridge shoot with 'phenomenal' habitat creation and predator control to conserve wild grey partridge, corn buntings and skylarks, has scooped gold at the annual Purdey Awards, now in its 25th year.

Ferns, battles and strawberry tarts
FIFTY-THREE new gardens have signed up to open for Scoward's Gardens Scheme (SGS) this year, bringing the total to more than 400, with 244 charities and local good causes set to benefit.

Heart to art
Oskar Reinhart, Switzerland's Samuel Courtauld and a man so driven that he pursued one painting for 30 years, amassed such an extraordinary collection that it fed two museums. Now, a selection of his works goes on show in London

Light work
Tiffany Daneff discovers how to transform a typically dark London back garden into a light-filled green haven that is always in use

Trumpets call
HOOP-PETTICOAT daffodils is what the RHS calls them, but no one remembers the 1860s fashion for those uncomfortable waist-worn cages that concealed the ankles of Victorian ladies from upskirting gentlemen.

Come on, baby, light my fire
With its glossy orange cap, the 'little flame with a velvet foot' is a colourful addition to winter's mushroom bounty, but don't confuse it for a funeral bell, warns John Wright

Nature and nurture
In this final article in a series of three, Tim Richardson looks at the innovative and superbly maintained 18th-century landscape garden of Bramham

Magnificent mahonias
Scented, easy to grow and with many new forms in the pipeline, the once-maligned mahonia is due a renaissance, believes Charles Quest-Ritson

Mould and behold
Josiah Wedgwood beat today’s marketing virtuosos by some 260 years, but his remarkable social conscience stands out even more than his talent for business. Tristram Hunt traces the life and legacy of one of Britain’s most brilliant minds

Clashing colours
MINIATURE electric-pink ears are emerging through a tapestry of leaves and bare brown ground. It is January and this is the first wonder of the gardening year. Cyclamen coum also come in paling shades from the plush of ruby to snow white. However, my gardening partner and husband covets only the deepest magenta flowers, combing plant nurseries and DIY shops for the most colour-saturated flowers wriggling through the pots and trays of small heart-shaped leaves. He remarks on the energy of these miniature enamel beauties and says he finds it strengthening. He is, however, not a purist collector and, although he loves to set these garnets on a velvety ground under trees when planting these small corms, he also loves creating swathes of them in grass and beds, all muddled up with snowdrops and winter aconites. Snowdrops, yes, any time, but yellow aconites, Eranthis hyemalis, with puce cyclamen? Really? I, too, rejoice in the fringe of first green the aconites bring, that little lion's mane of chrome, but I recoil rather at the brassy cocktail of lemoncello aconites with the cherry brandy-coloured C. coum, except perhaps in a jug indoors. Isn't this rather sickly? Mr B feels strongly that it all helps to brighten up the dull days of February.

New link formed in food chain
Supermarkets recognise they need farmers as partners if they are going to stack their shelves

Building the dream
Sustainable, stylish and with all the modern benefits, buying a countryside new build can be a tempting proposition

Friends with benefits
Charles Quest-Ritson is a convert to the use of nematodes, parasitic worms that act as a biological control of many troublesome garden pests

Catch us if you can
England will have to fly to overtake runaway favourites France and Ireland in the impending Guinness Six Nations, says Owain Jones, as he sizes up the key players who could change their team's fate

Heard it on the radio
Company, music, news and a glimpse of life beyond: the first form of home-based mass entertainment, radio quickly became the soundtrack to our lives and it isn't going anywhere, says Ben Lerwill

Full of the joys of spring(ers)
Big brother to the fashionable cocker, the energetic, enthusiastic and thoroughly endearing English springer remains our most popular working spaniel, says Matthew Dennison

Snake, rattle and roll
Imported from India, Snakes and Ladders has been stripped of its demigods, Heaven and other spiritual elements, until only the dice and an ability to count remain, finds Rob Crossan

A Palladian premonition
Bramham Park, West Yorkshire, part I The home of Nick and Rachel Lane Fox - In the first of three articles, Richard Hewlings examines one of the most original and idiosyncratic houses of early 18th-century Yorkshire and offers a fresh analysis of its architecture

Living in eclectic dreams
Next month's auction at Sworders marks the final chapter in the extraordinary story of the legendary London antique dealer, Guinevere. For 60 years, its highly distinctive approach inspired Mick Jagger, Ralph Lauren, Valentino and generations of interior designers. Its influence has changed the trade forever, says COUNTRY LIFE's interiors editor, Giles Kime

Wedding peace of mind
On your big day, good things happen in The Insurance Emporium
Smash hits
The end of last year saw some great sales, as one of the few works by Botticelli still in private hands and a painting by brothers Gustav and Ernst Klimt obliterated their estimates

Those old familiar faces
Former homes of persons of note, including rock royalty, writers and gin pioneers, are as covetable as ever

Quick on the draw
The skills of John Flaxman, idol of all dilettanti’, brought the classics of literature to life, but also his fellow artists, as art dealer Tom Edwards tells Carla Passino

The architect as religious teacher
‘He stands out for austere highmindedness combined with a rich sense of decoration

Coming up roses
The sight of row upon row of roses in bloom at Whartons nurseries in Norfolk is even more magnificent than the tulip fields of Holland. Charles Quest-Ritson looks behind the scenes at our largest rose producer