When you live in a chocolate-box country cottage, there is something of an imperative to create a suitably picturesque garden to complement it. But if you are a well-established garden designer and avid plant collector who is creating their own private garden, there are other priorities at play, too, such as having a place to experiment, creating a tranquil bolt hole and avoiding cliché.
Landscape designer Chris Moss arrived at Ivy Cottage four years ago. Its position is delightfully rural, backing on to ancient woodland that is part of Ebernoe Common, managed by the Sussex Wildlife Trust, and the immediate area hums with insects and wildlife, including nightingales, goldcrests, buzzards, countless bats and even glowworms. Built in 1780, the pretty tile-hung cottage is diminutive in scale, so Chris’s aim has been to literally “engulf it in plants”.
“As the summer progresses the planting gets higher and higher,” he says. “I plant very densely so the need to weed is largely dispensed with.” This is a rented property (Chris rents it from a client who is happy to give him free rein), so hard landscaping has purposefully been kept simple. A gently curving path made of locally made bricks, left unpointed, runs between several planting beds to the front porch.
There are four of these beds, set into grass. “I planned the first two by the gate to feel as though you are approaching the cottage through a meadow. Initially, I put in plug plants of natives including common yarrow, lesser knapweed, ox-eye daisies and field scabious. They’re designed to be mowable at the end of the season and they have a loose, informal feel to them.”
Chris's advice on creating a modern cottage garden
この記事は Gardens Illustrated の July 2023 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
すでに購読者です ? サインイン
この記事は Gardens Illustrated の July 2023 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
すでに購読者です? サインイン
WHY SHOULD I VOLUNTEER?
Giving your free time to volunteer in the community or as a mentor can have a big impact, and also benefit you in ways you can't imagine, says John Wyer
EARTHLY CONCERN
Weeds, slugs, birds and mice - all are welcome on Birch Farm in Devon, where Joshua Sparkes seeks to respect the local ecosystem and mimic nature in his innovative approach to growing
Gardening is good for you
In the first of his new factual column on the benefits of gardening, Dr Richard Claxton uncovers all the evidence-based ways it can help your physical health.
TANGERINE DREAM
On the edge of one of London's busiest roundabouts, Nigel Dunnett has created exciting combinations of drought-tolerant plants for a roof garden that is as unexpected as it is joyful
GOOD ENOUGH TO EAT
Growing your own edible plants is a great way to boost your gut microbiome. Discover expert picks of edimentals that are both beautiful and beneficial
Waste not, nice plot
Designer Miria Harris gave herself the challenge of a no-skip, zero-waste project, giving away, recycling or reusing everything in this back garden before transforming it into a space her client could love
One for all
A new community garden designed by Sarah Price around an old library turned arts centre in southeast London is a treasured space for local residents and garden lovers alike
Meet our horticultural HEROES
Discover the stories of the extraordinary garden champions who are making a difference to places, people, plants and the planet
SHARE AND SHARE ALIKE
In the culinary world, chefs and food writers sometimes closely guard their recipes, says Nigel Slater. Among gardeners, however, there is a refreshing spirit of generosity
Autumn at Sissinghurst
As the garden slips into a new season, head gardener Troy Scott Smith and his team are busy with tasks from hedge cutting and lawn work to bulb planting and sowing seeds.