If your mother is rose guru Gwen Fagan, you can’t help but be passionate about old-fashioned roses.
“Although I have many roses in my garden these days, they weren’t always my first love,” says Jessie Walton on her farm outside Grabouw. “My mother is the one who has always had a love affair with oldfashioned roses but her enthusiasm eventually rubbed off on me and now I adore the masses of roses that bloom in my garden each spring!”
“My husband Ian and I moved to the farm 37 years ago. Back then, there was only a small garden with a few cut roses and some ground around the house that was overgrown with kikuyu. I encouraged our two daughters to each create a small veggie garden and later my father-inlaw agreed to clear an area for a proper garden. That was 25 years ago.
“I turned to my mom for advice. She told me: ‘Create garden rooms with paths leading up to them; you should always be able to see the next room but there must be another pathway winding away from that to arouse your curiosity’. It was such good advice. My garden now has the most wonderful sense of continuity.”
Jessie initially grew only indigenous plants, mostly propagated from seeds and cuttings. “But the magnificent Rhododendrons and roses at Fresh Woods, a nearby farm garden, inspired me to also create an exotic plant section. That’s when my love for Rhododendrons, azaleas and Japanese maples took root. About 10 years ago, I got the opportunity to buy well-known breeder Jan van Bergen’s collection of camellias and Japanese maples. I was thrilled as I already had plants that thrive in acidic soil. Our climate here in Grabouw is cooler than surrounding areas, so we are able to grow these plants very successfully,” she says.
From orchard to nursery
Denne historien er fra December 2019-utgaven av Home South Africa.
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Denne historien er fra December 2019-utgaven av Home South Africa.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
Pestilence Domestica
We usually call them dirty, dangerous and utterly gross. But what if we looked at domestic pests through a different lens, asks Karin Brynard.
Quick as a flash!
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The gift that keeps on giving
By taking cuttings and dividing existing plants and those from friends, Anne Turner and her son David have created a stunning garden that takes on a whole new personality as the seasons change.
Upcycle it!
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Little house in the forest
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Living large, inside and out
South Africans love a space where indoors and outdoors come together.
Modern CLASSIC
With authenticity as a guiding design principle, a young family has created their happy space in a 105-year-old house in the heart of vibrant Sea Point.
Peace & quiet...
A cinematographer and a set designer found the perfect bolt-hole in the Eastern Cape Karoo where they can truly relax and unwind.
ART AND SOUL
Five years ago, the Krugers transformed a tired city bungalow into a unique and modern family home.
Group therapy
Add impact and create rhythm using repetition and collections, as these Home readers have done.