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The cottage industry
Disraeli once said that ‘the palace is not safe when the cottage is not happy’, but looking at these five examples, happiness is almost guaranteed
Setting the scene
Looking for homes that were once part of large estates reveals a rich tapestry
Life behind barbs
In the hazy heat of high summer, John Lewis-Stempel stops to contemplate the lives and loves, deaths and hates of his 600-year-old Great Green Wall
Very much a cut above
Harvard Farm, Halstock, Dorset When topiarist Jake Hobson brought his sculpturally inspired techniques to bear on his mother’s evergreens, the results were unforgettable.
Glory be to God for wrinkly tin
From cathedral to gospel halls, tin tabernacles are regarded with a special affection in Britain. Mary Miers discovers the ups and downs of corrugated-iron churches–the original flat-packed buildings
This sceptr'd isle
Dwelling on a tiny island sounds idyllic, but is the reality quite as romantic? Tim Relf explores the charms and challenges of a most particular way of life
Hounds and dairy maids
All Georgian architects enjoyed designing estate buildings, because they gave scope for experimentation and novelty. John Martin Robinson explores the inventive– but easily overlooked–creations of James Wyatt
More than one string to her bow
The violinist on virtual teaching, playing Elgar and lobbying the Government
Exorcising the fear
The sculptor Elisabeth Frink (1930–93) responded to the climate of the Cold War with powerful works exploring man and beast as predator and prey. As her work undergoes a timely reappraisal, Mary Miers considers her career
Nidderdale
Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty
Three hundred not out
It is 300 years since the Rev Gilbert White, creator of Nature writing, father of modern ecology and forerunner of Darwin, was born. John Lewis-Stempel salutes the man who put England’s Eden into words
Wide Sargasso Sea
They can dive deeper than a nuclear submarine, make perilous journeys across the ocean not once, but twice in their lifetime and are trafficked in suitcases in their millions. Julia Platt Leonard learns more about the threats facing Anguilla anguilla
The German way
FEAR not: I am not going to tell you that the German way of using herbaceous plants is better than ours.
Shouldering the burden
The human figure supporting a structural load–the female caryatid or male atlas–is a long-running theme in British architecture. John Goodall examines this playful idea
The future is Raymond
Robotics eventually arrive at the farm, as do wildflowers and oystercatchers
Hello, sunshine
Each fossil we uncover reveals another chapter in the story of life on Earth. In an extract from his new book, A History of Plants in 50 Fossils, palaeobotanist Paul Kenrick examines a 47 million-year-old member of the sunflower family, Raiguenrayun cura
Oh, we do love to grow beside the seaside
The key to making a success of a garden on the coast is finding plants that will be happy whatever the wind, sea and sand throw at them. John Hoyland suggests some of the best to try
It really is cricket
England should beat the West Indies in the Wisden Trophy starting today, but, asks James Fisher, what will be the impact of lockdown, new faces and closed doors?
That's the way to do it !
A parrot-voiced hunchback with a hook nose, an evil smile and a ghastly taste for domestic violence could hardly be considered a role model for children, yet our love for Punch and Judy shows endures. Matthew Dennison explores the evolution of Pulcinella
‘Sir, what's the difference between a cactus and a succulent?'
SUCCULENTS: their very name is mouthwatering— unless, of course, you’re one of those gardeners who lumps them with cacti, their spiny cousins. ‘Sir, what’s the difference between a cactus and a succulent?
The sands of time past, present and future
From the reed marsh of the south to the machair of the north, dunes are the UK’s most dynamic landscapes, continually, magically, evolving. They’re also, says Mark Griffiths, much misunderstood and in need of urgent help
Full of broad beans
Once believed to be vessels for the souls of the recently departed, a freshly picked pod with broad beans nestling in their velvety white casing is a seasonal obsession for Tom Parker Bowles
Breath of fresh air
Laura Gascoigne celebrates the neglected genius of Richard Parkes Bonington (1802–28), an English painter of French seascapes who fell between two schools
Beautiful Britain
Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty
Any Fort in a storm
Interesting coastal houses for sale include a formerly piratical home on the Helford, a hidden, creekside recording studio and three Napoleonic-era forts
An Englishman's hut is his castle
From preservers of British modesty to kitsch and unloved relics, our nation’s beach huts are back in vogue.
Malvern Hills
Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty
With your head in the clouds
From cirrus to cumulonimbus, there’s never been a better time to study the clouds skudding across the sky, says Richard Webber, as he discovers more about the man who named them With your head in the clouds
THE CAPITAL ACCORDING TO ... Marine Tanguy
Rosie Paterson talks to the founder of MTArt–an award winning agency for visual artists–and Marylebone resident
Sit back and re-flax
Once a familiar sight throughout Britain, delicate blue flax flowers are once again gracing the fields of the Cotswolds. Jane Wheatley discovers more about the production and many uses of linen