
To the south-east of the house lies the Formal Garden which is surrounded
by one of Miss Jekyll’s favourite natural frames, yew hedging.
The style here is more structured and disciplined than the Wild Garden
and its season, which depends largely on herbaceous perennials, is shorter.
A pergola, festooned with climbing plants, runs from the house to over-look
the Rose garden, the Bowling and Tennis Lawns. The planting on the pergola
is varied and interesting. On the ten stout oak posts Miss Jekyll's
plants roses, aristolochia, jasmine and virginia creeper. This planting
makes the pergola a fine and important feature in the garden for an
unusually long period. Rosa Jersey Beauty is evergreen and the jasmine
holds some leaves at the very start of spring. Throughout the summer
roses and aristolochia takes turns in producing flower and foliage,
and from autumn until the frosts of winter Virginia Creeper displays
glorious crimson and purple foliage.
The drops in levels to the Rose garden, Bowling and Tennis lawns are
supported by dry-stone walls which Miss Jekyll planted to give the effect
of vertical flower-beds; those plants fill the ares with colour from
late February onwards. As summer commences the colours spread to the
Rose garden. Here peonies, roses, and lilies fill the area with colour
and scent in a breath-taking combination. Towards the end of summer
the two main herbaceous borders take on the spectacular display. Miss
Jekyll plannned simple ‘cottage garden’ flowers, including
hollyhocks, delphinium, phlox, poppies, campanula and much else, their
colours running in drifts from cool whites, blues and yellows at either
end to orange and fiery reds in the centres. She was careful to use
plants that would fill the space of an earlier flowering plant as the
season draws to a close. Dahlias and helianthus can be bent over a dying
oriental poppy, and Gypsophila paniculata also fills empty spaces with
a fine white froth of flowers. These borders continue to provide a glorious
display until late autumn. Other borders in this area are planted with
shrubs and structural plants which give valuable winter shape to the
garden. Yucca, rosemary, lavender, olearia and roses are used, and the
planting of bergenia is a year round delight.

Copyright ©
2008 Ros Wallinger