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.


Montreal








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