In
1984 we moved to the almost derelict house and garden at Upton Grey.
All had been sadly neglected. We found 46 burst water pipes in the house
and the garden was over-run with weeds and brambles. But luckily, through
neglect, no constructive damage had been done, no swimming pool or hard
tennis court built. The dry-stone walls had collapsed but their Purbeck
stones were still there, as were gentle shallow steps, so typical of
Gertrude Jekyll's eye for proportion.
The
few survivors from Miss Jekyll's original garden that we found in the
Wild garden were three species of daffodil and some trees. In the formal
Garden to the south-east of the house we found Fuchsia Riccartonii,
Acanthus spinosus, Corydalis ochroleuca, Hemerocallis fulva, paeonies
and Hartstongue ferns. In May 1984, copies of the original plans arrived
from the Reef Point Collection in California, where most surviving Jekylliana
is held; they are dated 1908 and 1909. Work on clearing incorrect trees,
weeds and digging out trenches for yew hedges began immediately. We
sterilised and cleared the soil, then stripped away grass/moss surfaces
in the formal garden before double digging and feeding with well rotted
manure. In the Wild garden we staked the area into ten foot (three metre)
grids in order to establish exact places for replanting.
Copyright
© 2008
Ros Wallinger