The Voice of the Nation’s Gardeners

We’re all used to seeing gardening programmes on the TV these days,  hosted by an array of “celebrity” TV gardeners like Alan Titchmarsh. However  earlier this year it was a much earlier celebrity gardener who was Titchmarsh’s subject when he spoke at the ceremonial unveiling of a blue plaque  by English Heritage  on this suburban semi in south-west London.   He was honouring  the man who paved the way for television gardening programmes when he became  the first TV gardener and later also  the voice of the wartime Dig for Victory Campaign  and as such “the Voice”.

I wonder if you know he was?

 

 

 

 

 

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Peggy the Plantaholic Duchess

Peggy  was one of the great figures of the social, scientific and horticultural circles of Georgian England. She was intelligent, curious about almost everything with a wide network of friends across all fields of knowledge but especially botany and other aspects of natural history. Of course it helped that she was born into a powerful aristocratic family and was, as the only child, immensely wealthy which  enabled her not only to marry a Duke but indulge her interest in gardening and collect anything that took her fancy – from plants, to shells, art and antiquities.

In an age of great collectors she rivalled the greatest. So why isn’t she better known?

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An Aztec Herbal

from the Aztec Herbal

Gardens and medicine are closely intertwined in every culture, and were even more so in the past when most remedies were derived from plants. Yet much of that knowledge has been lost and  I suspect few of us these days would have a clue about their useful properties – the only one I can think of immediately is using dock leaves to counter nettle stings.  So perhaps you can imagine the surprise on the face of Dr. Charles Clark when he discovered the subject of this post in the Vatican Library in 1929.

Now usually known as the Aztec Herbal it turned out to be a remarkable find- although probably not really because of the efficacy of its medical recommendations or even of its horticultural significance. I’m not sure you’d want to try its suggested treatments either- but even if you did you might have problems finding them. Read on to find out more about the gardens where these plants grew and which ones could help if you have a headache, scabies, a pain in the eye or worse….

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Elsie’s garden

In 1926 a 54 year old woman who had  inherited a riverside house decided to create  a garden.  Nothing particularly startling about that although it was thought  at the time by some of her friends that she didn’t know the difference between a dandelion and a daisy.

Those friends were soon proved wrong, and over the next thirty years she made a garden that stretched to 20 acres and boasted one of the largest plant collections of her day, including newly introduced rarities such as Meconopsis, the Himalayan Blue Poppy.  It was all the more remarkable because it was created  in and around a largely coniferous forest and is under snow for about half the year.

Image of Meconopsis and Forget-me-nots by Tim Glass taken from the exhibition

The woman was Elsie Reford, and, as I discovered recently at an exhibition about her life,  garden-making was just one of her talents.

So read on to find out more about this extraordinary woman who  broke almost every glass ceiling she encountered during her long life, and about her garden now usually better known as Le Jardin de Metis,  where an acclaimed international garden festival  has been held annually since 2000.

 

 

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Montreal Botanic Garden and its origins

Montreal  is home to one of the great botanic gardens of the world. You might be forgiven for thinking  that since Canada was once part of the British Empire that the garden was one of the wide network linked or founded by Kew in the 19th century.  But it wasn’t.  

Instead, like the gardens at Niagara I wrote about last week, it was only set up in 1931 in part as response to unemployment caused by the Great Depression. Its great protagonist   was a Catholic monk, enthusiastic botanist, and Quebec nationalist, Brother Marie-Victorin.

He was a charismatic and persuasive figure and after a long campaign convinced the authorities that laying out a new botanic garden would not only be a good way of providing employment but also bring in tourists and of course be good for encouraging research and interest in plants and botany.

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