Tuesday 18 February 2020

Gardening in Windy Location - 13th February 2020

Tricia

A seasonal February Garden Posy



This February's meeting was an interesting presentation by 
Tricia Acland from Mungrisdale; 
who had kindly stepped in at the last minute when the original speaker became unavailable.


Illustrated by many slides, Tricia gave a description of her own gardening challenges due to the very windy location of her one acre garden. It lies in a secluded valley in the shadow of Blencathra.


When Tricia and her husband bought the property in the 1970’s, they were keen not to make a wooded shelter belt, because they wished to maintain the spectacular views of the surrounding fells. They did plant some specimen trees and initially 2000 daffodils in the grassland and beside the stream which runs across the garden.

Tricia is keen to enjoy the naturalistic aspects of her plants, using organic principles and the happen-stance of nature. Due to the constant winds, plants chosen have to withstand these conditions and although there have been some casualties, Tricia has managed to nurture a huge variety of plants in the garden which is very stony and acidic.

A fairly new development has been the creation of a gravel garden, in place of an evergreen tree which had to be removed for safety reasons. Low lying plants (hostas, ferns, euphorbias, astrantia, hellebores, geraniums, epimediums, eryngiums) all thrive well. In crevices of the surrounding Lakeland stone walls, ferns and lewisia grow happily.
There is an alpine patch and lots of sturdy perennials like phlomis, lilies, brunnera, meconopsis, along with a wide variety of grasses to give height and colour throughout the year.

It is a garden to “look out from” taking full advantage of its stunning setting .

Written by Jude Jansen

Each year the garden is open to the public via the NGS scheme.

There is really only one word to describe the view from Chapelside, and that’s spectacular,” writes Noel Kingsbury (Gardens Illustrated, July 2018). A little overstated? The immediate backdrop here of the Lake District fells is always the primary consideration in design and planting choices. Key elements are the enclosing field walls, together with the creative use of stone more widely, often with water. Winds are certainly harassing, but you couldn’t wish to be snug in sheltering rooms in such a fine setting. Just look across and through the beds and borders or over the big pond to the hills close by!”


" In Claire Takacs’s book Dreamscapes, a glorious photographic gallery of gardens worldwide, much the smallest featured is Chapelside. The listed farmhouse, fine barns and outbuildings stand comfortably in their acre plot. “We share occupancy with house martins, frogs, newts and red squirrels.”
This garden is a peaceful place, respectful of its location, full of colour, form and texture, yet within a relaxed regime allowing self-seeding and the quirkiness of the unexpected. You will find both familiar and less usual plants: ferns, hostas, hellebores, alpines, anemones and meconopsis all feature. Orchids have arrived, surprising but welcome. An informal area under the fell has mixed trees and a meadow slope with bulbs. The approach is organic: some compost, lots of leaf mould … perhaps more moss than grass."

Tricia has kindly provided us with a list of some of her plantings:

Trees:
Sorbus Casmiriana                      Betula Jacumontii               Viburnum bodnantense
Vilmorinii                                    Malus Golden Hornet         Cytisus battandieri
Copper Kettle                              Amelanchier                       Viburnum mariesii
Pink Pagoda                                Crataegus – double & single
Autumn Spire                             Oemleria cerasiformis

Shrubs:
Salix matsudana tortosa              Escallonia                            Physocarpus ‘Dart’s Gold’
Salix ‘Mark Postill’                     Lonicera Purpusii                Leycesteria ‘Golden Lanterns’
Stephandra tanakae                     Philadelphus                        S. incisa ‘Crispa’
Leucothoe                                   Rose de Rescht                    R. Ispahan
R. ‘Seagull’                                 R.‘Dunwich Rose’               R. cantabrigiensis

Climbers:
Clematis ‘Morning Yellow’ C. wilsonii Hydrangea petiolaris
C. alba luxurians caerilea

Perennials (just a few):
Inula hookeri                             Mathiasella ‘Green Dream    Gillenia
Lysimacia                                  Thermopsis                            Camassias white (semi plena) & blue
G. Mrs Kendall Clark                G.Rozanne                             G.conereum ‘Purple Pillow’
Omphalodes ‘Starry Eyes’         Astrantia ‘Roma’                   Iris – sibirica / chrysographes
Eryngium Amethyst Blue          E.agavilium                           E.horridum
Paris polyphylla                        Phlomis russeliana                 Seseli libanotis          Acaena

Grasses:
Calamagrostis ‘ Karl Foerster’  Miscanthus ‘Gracillimus’      Carex testacea Panicum v.’Squaw’


And finally a super seasonal summary from Joe Swift's February Saturday Times article about pruning:
RHS Image - Pruning cut - remember your gloves!