The ‘smallest clever man I ever knew”….

Edward William Cooke by John & Charles Watkins albumen carte-de-visite, mid-late 1860s, National Portrait Gallery

Edward William Cooke
by John & Charles Watkins
carte-de-visite, mid-late 1860s, National Portrait Gallery

So said John Ruskin of Edward Cooke who was mentioned in the post of May 2nd about Stumperies.

Ruskin—a fellow enthusiast for the natural sciences—went on to say that Cooke was ” full of accurate and valuable knowledge in natural history with which he is always overflowing at the wrong times’

Cooke  designed gardens that put rockwork, rootwork, and ferneries firmly on the Victorian horticultural agenda.  But he was more than just a gardener.  He was also a painter of some note, but, not as you might expect, for his botanical art or landscape painting,  but for his marine pictures and seascapes.

Read on to find out more about him and his various careers and discover some of the gardens he was involved with, …..

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Paulownia

David Marsh May 2015

David Marsh
May 2015

My paulownia is in flower. Before you yawn too obviously, at a gardening bore droning on about their favourite plant of the moment, just ask yourself  if you’ve ever seen one in blossom yourself? If not – and you’d definitely remember if you had – then you have missed one of the great marvels of the world of trees.  It is simply spectacular at this time of year looking up and seeing the soft purple trumpet flowers against a brilliant blue sky.

Read on to find out more about the history and uses of this extraordinary tree….

 

 

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A Little Chaos…

ALC_posterNot  being a great film buff I’m quite fussy about what new films I go and see. But a film about Andre Le Notre and the construction of the gardens at Versailles, especially one with such a distinguished cast list, made me rush to my local Odeon the week A Little Chaos was released.   I was going to give my verdicts – as historian, gardener and occasional film-goer – in this opening paragraph but then realised no-one would read on that if I was quite so upfront,  so instead lets begin with Kate Muir’s review from the Times.

She summarized the plot:  “Welcome to Grand Garden Designs, set in the fabulous park of Versailles! This week’s competitor is Madame Sabine De Barra, and her challenge is to build an outdoor ballroom with tiered fountains, and a touch of the seashore! Will she bring in the botanical build on time and on budget? Will the head gardener give her the green thumbs up?” [Times, 17 April 2015]

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Stumperies

The stumpery at Arundel Castle, from https://greatgardensforkids.wordpress.com

The stumpery at Arundel Castle, from https://greatgardensforkids.wordpress.com

Imagine standing a load of dead trees on their heads and ‘planting’ them in your garden.  Does it sound like a good idea? or even a sane one ? Yet yet its been done by all sorts of people on for the last 150 years and more, including most famously, Prince Charles.

But not everyone sees the attraction of heaping up old tree stumps and making them a garden feature.  ‘When the Duke of Edinburgh first laid eyes upon the stacked-up tree roots of the Highgrove “stumpery”, he turned to Prince Charles and said, “When are you going to set fire to this lot?’ (Andy Sturgeon, Guardian 16th Dec 2006).

Anyway, having tried to make a small version in my own garden, and realising how difficult it is both as piece of design work but also simply as a physical task – tree stumps are big, cumbersome and extremely heavy – set me thinking about the origins of this rather strange garden feature. Like most posts that I’ve written, there’s more to the story than meets the eye, and I found myself following all sorts of byways and sidetracks, which will doubtless lead to more posts soon!

But now  read on to find how a painter who specialised in sea pictures, a fox hunting poet and a wealthy industrialist devised this quirky but charming Victorian oddity…and maybe where they got the idea from in the first place.

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Down the Garden Path…

Titlepage illustration by Rex Whistler

title-page illustration by Rex Whistler

“I fear that this book holds little practical wisdom.” is hardly the kind of comment to make someone pick up a gardening book, is it?

“You must not look to it for guidance. It will not tell you how to prune a rose-bush, nor will it suddenly explode with terrifying remarks like ‘Now is the time to thin out the carrots . . .’ . . .an observation which always makes me come out in a cold sweat, when I read it.”  Yet, nonetheless, Beverley Nichols, prolific author  as well an archetypal good-looking gay icon, was a great gardener whose gardening books  are still in print and still deserve to be read.

Down the Garden Path, published in 1932, was his first and has  remained popular ever since. This post is a quick look through the book to encourage you to go and read it -and its follow-up volumes -properly for  yourself.

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