As regular readers will know I’m very fond of the work of garden writer Beverley Nichols, but until recently I hadn’t really taken much notice of his interest and involvement in flower arranging. True the subject crops up in several of his semi-fictionalised accounts of his gardens but in 1967 he also published an entire book on the subject which he described as “an art — a minor art perhaps but a fascinating one nevertheless – and one with some similarities to music and painting.”
But a book, a whole book on flower arranging and its history, surely isn’t really possible. Well, its not only Nichols but several others who’ve proved that it is!







When I first read it I wondered if was an extract from the journal of an intrepid but rather romantic Victorian plant hunter. In fact it’s an extract from an admittedly Victorian-explorer-sounding book called Six-legged Snakes in New Guinea, and as you’ve probably gathered from the title of the post the author wasn’t quite the bearded pith-helmet wearing explorer that I’d imagined but instead was an extraordinary woman: Evelyn Cheesman.
A couple of weeks ago I led a small party of French visitors round some of the gardens of London, Kent and Sussex. One of those I chose was Hever Castle which I hadn’t visited since lockdown. We were all so impressed with what we saw that I’ve decided to update my much earlier post about it.
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