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Updates - EU legislation and Oudolf meadow
Two updates: one on the EU proposed legislation on plant cultivars, and the other on the perennial meadow at Hummelo. Miscanthus...
Powis Castle garden revisited
A lot of people in the garden world list Powis Castle as their favourite garden. I have at times. I went several times many years ago (like...
Mingling and mapping and autumn days
It feels a long time ago now (mid 90s) that I decided that the crucial issue in the planting design as an aesthetic issue was about mixing p...
Courson - c'est magnifique!
That woman's scarves, the jacket, the style! Just been to Courson for the first time ever. I first heard about this French garden sho...
Why I'm not going to Chelsea.
I usually go to the show every three or four years. Like a lot of people. Once you have seen two Chelseas you realise that one ...
Sado-naturalism? A hard look at the Japanese garden - Part Two
Clipped bushes, classic little bobbles.... we'd disparagingly call meatballs if they were lined up in front of a burger outlet in Nort...
URGENT ACTION! The end of 95% of all nurseries?
I think the European Union is a good thing. It has promoted peace and prosperity for our continent for half a century. However it does have ...
Making the most of native flora
Cow parsley (Anthriscus sylvestris) and other wildflowers in light shade in a garden in Suffolk. Paths mown through create a w...
Why do we believe it? Gardeners - fact, myth and downright *******.
Gardening discourse is full of information which is actually wrong. Far more than in many other areas of life - medicine maybe an exception,...
Suburbia, red in tooth and claw
On a recent trip to the US I found myself in several conversations with people about animals in the garden. Some astonishment that we do not...
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A hard look at the Japanese garden - Part One
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Sado-naturalism? A hard look at the Japanese garden - Part Two
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Clipped bushes, classic little bobbles.... we'd disparagingly call meatballs if they were lined up in front of a burger outlet in Nort...
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A hard look at the Japanese garden - Part One
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Garden at Tenryu-ji monastery, Kyoto. Classic sand garden, pool and borrowed scenery. I have a clear memory of a favourite book in the lib...
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Wild Japan
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Angelica ursina A recent trip to Japan (the purpose of which will have to wait until another blog post) has been a wonderful opp...
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