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He's a blooming talent
A rising star of the gardening world on chicken-friendly gardening and admirable women
For peat's sake
A bog can store 10 times more carbon than a forest; calling a halt to the use of peat-based products in horticulture is long overdue
Coming home to roost
The chickens are reprieved and it’s keep calm and carry on with the calving
A sonnet to spring
Once believed to be summoned from slumber by birdsong, spring–from gambolling lambs to pale wood anemones and the rabbity-nosed velvet of ash buds– is a season of timeless joy for John Lewis-Stempel
A play on contrasts
The Old Rectory, Litton Cheney, Dorset With the help of Arne Maynard, the many and varying elements of this four-acre garden, once the home of engraver Reynolds Stone, have been beautifully drawn together.
Isolation – How To Do It
With humour, impressive variety and a pertinent portrait of a doctor in plague-ridden 17th-century Italy, galleries are coming up trumps online
Seeing the woods for the trees
The Government has promised to plant 60 million trees by 2024. It’s a laudable aim, but there are taxing questions to answer about practicalities, such as funding, work force, which species, where to get them from and where to plant them, observes John Grimshaw
Lustrous lives
Caroline Bugler is mesmerised by the work of a husband and wife who were among the most inventive artists of their generation
Somewhere, over the rainbow
Things were going so well–but the health of the housing market before the coronavirus crisis hit indicates that it can and will recover
For love or money
They have evolved from knapsacks to coin purses and to today’s card holders, but does the wallet have a future in our increasingly cashless society, asks Roderick Easdale
It's a brave new world
Some plays seem to be standing up remarkably well to screening and even cast new perspectives on old favourites
In with the new(builds)
They’re energy efficient, with modern features and contemporary design, and you can move in straight away. Is now the time to buy new?
Family politics
Family politics Descendants of famous MPs tell Eleanor Doughty what it’s like to grow up in a house where politics dominate the day to day
Commanding silence
In the second of two articles, John Goodall looks at the post-Second World War restoration of Llandaff Cathedral and its outstanding collection of 20th-century furnishings
A gentleman and a player
The actor on making an Archers villain loveable and being cast as a ‘slightly dodgy toff’
The art of going online
Galleries and dealers are using the difficulty of the lockdown to showcase their wares in virtual forms, from wartime oils to a cleaning lady and a Turk
Swimming with otters
Amy Jeffs dips into the life and legacy of St Cuthbert, patron saint of Durham Cathedral
The hills are alive
Three properties with ample space for entertaining prove that the best parties happen outside of London
Not to be sniffed at
Whatever its name–ramsons, gypsy’s onions, bear leek, snake’s food, stinking Jenny–wild garlic makes for a perfect (and pungent) vivid green pesto, eulogises Tom Parker Bowles
Third time's the charm
The cathedral at Llandaff was begun exactly 900 years ago. In the first of two articles, John Goodall looks at the history of this outstanding building before
Creative destruction
The felling of seven mature beech in the storms of 1987 offered the chance to make a rare and charming garden, says George Plumptre
Where shepherds watch
The striking, dark-grey Herdwick sheep, with its appealing white face and strong homing instinct, is integral to the culture and economy of the Lake District, but farmers feel their way of life is under threat. Tessa Waugh reports
A neo-Romantic and Modernist
Peyton Skipwith considers the work of John Piper (1903–92) and assesses the enduring quality of his romantic vision
Whiter shades of pale
Trying to choose a neutral? You’ll be presented with a sea of confusing choices. Amelia Thorpe asks leading colour experts for advice on plotting a course
A lover of the meadows and the woods
Forever burdened with his daffodils, Wordsworth still remains one of the great shapers of the English-speaking mind and a true champion of Nature 250 years on, says Adam Nicolson
England's Hidden Beauty
On April 23, COUNTRY LIFE and Charles Stanley will host tours of Arley Hall and Gardens, Cheshire, followed by afternoon tea
The boy that sings on Duncton Hill
One of our most accomplished writers of the early 20th century, Hilaire Belloc had a lifelong love affair with West Sussex. His words still echo in the hills 150 years after his birth, finds Jack Watkins
Light the touch paper
Arundel Castle, West Sussex Head gardener Martin Duncan and his team are setting the borders on fire with bold and innovative plantings, finds Tiffany Daneff
A pleasure for the birds
Owletts, Cobham, Kent A property of the National Trust Intensely proud of his Kent ancestry, Sir Herbert Baker restored this unpretentious family house. Clive Aslet revisits the unexpected home of one of Britain’s outstanding Imperial architects
The sound of music
If you want a change from Glyndebourne, Garsington and The Grange, but Glastonbury is not to your taste, try Europe’s best classical and opera festivals, suggests Carla Passino