The Ribatejo region of Portugal is a landscape of gently rolling hills, fields, small farms, eucalyptus plantations and occasional patches of wilder landscape. High on a hilltop, some way from the nearest village, is the home of retired paediatrician Margarida Maia and her husband António, a cartoonist for the Portuguese daily newspaper Correio da Manhã. Here, Margarida has created a garden that is fast becoming something of a social-media sensation.
Margarida is very much an accidental gardener. With little gardening background, she only started making a garden here in 2017 because her son was getting married. “I wanted to have the celebration at our house,” she explains. “And I wanted to make a garden for that event. That’s how I got started.” Pleased with the results, she began to take rather lovely pictures of her garden on her phone, and to post them on Instagram. Gradually, over time, her garden images received more and more views, and she got more and more followers, until before long she had an audience in the tens of thousands.
Six years on, her early plantings are now maturing as solid and nicely integrated clumps of agapanthus, rosemary, Teucrium fruticans and, sprawling out below, the silvery foliage of Arctotis. It’s a resilient, low-maintenance combination, ideal for a Mediterranean climate where summers are hot and dry, and the rainy season of September to May is increasingly unreliable.
This story is from the July 2023 edition of Gardens Illustrated.
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This story is from the July 2023 edition of Gardens Illustrated.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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