Monthly Archives: March 2025

Queluz

Appearances can be deceptive.  A couple of days ago I  took a train out into what was once the countryside surrounding Lisbon,  hoping to see a garden that I’d mentioned in passing in an earlier post.   Ten minutes stroll … Continue reading

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Daffodil Day

Happy Daffodil Day! Daffodil Day is celebrated annually on March 22nd  and has been a key fundraising event organised by cancer charities across the world since the 1950s because the show of bright colour so early in the year  represents … Continue reading

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Josiah Wedgwood and a plateful of Green Frogs

It’s now just over ten years since the Wedgwood Collection, one of the most important industrial archives in the world and a unique record of over 250 years of British art, was saved by the Art Fund from sale and  dispersal. … Continue reading

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Whiteknights and the spendthrift Duke

A few weeks ago, purely by chance,  I came across an illustrated guide written in 1816 for  a garden called Whiteknights which was in its day probably the most famous garden in the country.  The guide was so intriguing that … Continue reading

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The Maharaja and his German gardener

When was the last time you needed a passport to visit a garden?  Or indeed had to walk past heavily armed  police to go in? We ran into that problem on my recent visit to south India, although luckily the … Continue reading

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