People have been spending more time in their gardens, nurturing plants, growing vegetables, and watching wildlife. Gardening was one of the most popular activities during the lockdown, although due to safety reasons, no one was able to go out and visit public or ‘open’ gardens.
That was a shame for one open garden scheme because it would normally raise thousands of pounds for nursing and care charities.
The National Garden Scheme, well-known for its yellow NGS ‘open garden’ signs that appear across the country every year, has raised over £17 million for Macmillan in the last 35 years and £10 million over 25 years for Marie Curie.
The NGS scheme in Devon alone has raised over a million pounds in six years, with the 2019 total standing at £191,000.
Early on in lockdown, the NGS offered virtual tours of gardens on its website, but as soon as restrictions were eased, some gardens did manage to open to the public, with pre-booking online and social distancing measures in place.
One of the first in the country to open in this way was Little Ash Bungalow at Fenny Bridges, which is owned by Helen and Brian Brown.
The one-and-a-half acre garden is filled with herbaceous perennials, shrubs and trees and along with the colorful borders has natural areas including a stream, pond, and woodland garden as well as sections devoted to wildflower meadows.
It opens every year, at the end of May and again in August. It had looked like the late May date was out of the question, but then restrictions were eased, a cautious go-ahead was given by the NGS and Helen took the plunge, opening on Tuesday 2 June.
Esta historia es de la edición August 2020 de Devon Life.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición August 2020 de Devon Life.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
Legends Of Lockdown
A new online exhibition features an array of Devon’s lockdown legends exploring their lives and communities during the pandemic restrictions
Look Out For Intelligent Slime!
Think you know your waxcaps from your dog vomit slime mould? Exmoor’s conservation team needs our help to record the pretty and the not-so-pretty wildlife living in this unique national park. finds out more
Retirement redefined
Millbrook Village’s Leah Jackson talks to AMELIA THURSTON about how wellbeing and quality of life are at the heart of the later living community
Look to the future
SU CARROLL talks to Sir Antony Gormley about his contribution to Devon’s artistic life
Natural beauty
Working with nature and the cycle of seasons, a new flower farm is blossoming in a fold of the beautiful River Teign valley
THE DIARY
SU CARROLL recommends the best events across the county this month
My kinda city...
With the perfect balance of country and city life, Exeter still shines as the jewel of the West. STEPHANIE DARKES shares her insider insights into the city that stole her heart
Letting themselves in for hard work...
Renovating your entire house is tough. Renovating someone else’s seven-bedroom Grade-II listed Georgian farmhouse and turning it into a high-end holiday let is even trickier. CHRISSY HARRIS went to Kingston see how it’s done
Lessons from history
History author Ian Mortimer has taken readers on travels through time from the Middle Ages to the Industrial Revolution. STU LAMBERT asks him how our country and our county changed in Regency times
A Reform character
The owner of North Devon’s longest standing brewery is about to take on a new challenge, as CATHERINE COURTENAY discovers