My friend Adrian once arrived at my door with pots of bluebells, a gift of bulbs dug from his garden. “I’m afraid there might be a few ‘strays’ in there too; I couldn’t separate them,” he said, handing me three rammed pots of Hyacinthoides non-scripta, the native English variety, with sky-blue bells hanging elegantly to one side of the stem.
Adrian was the person who rescued me when I arrived in London in my early twenties, something of a lost soul. I stayed in his spare room until I could find a place of my own, and he remained one of my dearest friends. I became rather fond of his old-fashioned garden with its rose arbour, pots of agapanthus and tubs of houseleeks. In spring, the bluebells ran amok at the bottom of his garden and reminded me of my childhood home with its hazel coppice and bluebell wood.
In the 25 years since they were planted, his generous gift of blue flowers has slowly vanished, but the ‘strays’ that arrived among the bulbs have thrived to the point of frustration. Tucked away in his pots, I would later discover, were seedlings of bright-yellow Welsh poppies, Papaver cambricum, whose delicate, paper-thin petals are charming in the right place – but my garden is not that place. Their fragile canary-yellow flowers come up in profusion each spring, looking oddly out of place among the green-and-white woodland-style planting. They spread like wildfire.
Denne historien er fra September 2024-utgaven av Gardens Illustrated.
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Denne historien er fra September 2024-utgaven av Gardens Illustrated.
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
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.