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  • Nature by design

    Nature by design

    Andy Byfield finds the mountain meadows of Turkey a rich source of
    inspiration as he contemplates the next step in his restoration of a
    walled garden in Devon


    Andy Byfield
    theguardian.com, Thursday 8 January 2015 16.24 GMT


    The meadows of the Pontic mountains in Turkey are rich with
    wildflowers. Photograph: Bob Gibbons

    Christmas is past, and our televisions screens are now under attack
    from the annual carpet bombing by tour operators. For many viewers,
    these adverts will stir thoughts of sunnier times and warmer climes in
    the summer months ahead, but they have made me dust off last year's
    holiday snaps - from a trip to the mountains of north-east Turkey. And
    what an inspiration these have been for my developing design ideas
    here in the walled garden that I am in the process of restoring.

    I was lucky enough to help lead a nature tour into the Pontus Alps and
    elevated plains of Eastern Anatolia with Bob Gibbons, on his very
    first sortie into Turkish heartland, back in July. In a fortnight, our
    tour was able to cherry-pick the very best that this country has to
    offer: the paying punters were not alone in being overwhelmed by
    flowery spectacle, for I too was gobsmacked by the exuberant beauty of
    the places that we were honoured to visit. And yet, while the guests
    were clicking digital memories, I couldn't stop thinking about Flete,
    my garden back in Devon. Better than any coffee table volume on garden
    design, here in front of me nature was doing a fine job at dreaming up
    some of the most stunning planting schemes that I have ever had the
    good fortune to see

    Colour combinations and structure are key elements of good design, and
    certainly we saw plenty of fabulous examples of both during our
    rambles. But more than ever before, I came to realise that the subtle
    mixing of plant groups versus singletons showed me how nature is so
    good at getting plant placing so very right.

    The pale smoky blue flowers of Scabiosa caucasia. Photograph: Jane
    Tregelles/Alamy

    Colour first. I don't know whether it was merely the sparkling
    Anatolian light, but everywhere we looked there were glorious spreads
    of colour. Tiny forest-edge meadows high in the mountains - cut for
    hay once a year - boasted a glorious mix of rich violet-blue Geranium
    magnificum, pale, sulphurous clover, Trifolium pannonicum, the cheery
    blancmange-pink vetch Coronilla varia, and elegant belled spires of
    campanulas in both creamy white (Campanula alliariifolia) and inky
    blue (C. collina). Some of these species braved the drier, higher
    montane steppe in the rain shadow on the south side of the mountains,
    where they were joined by bold club-headed golden Centaurea
    helenioides, the gleaming white and yellow costmary (Tanacetum
    balsamita - worth growing for its stunning silver grey foliage alone),
    and that most handsome of all scabious species, the lovely, pale smoky
    blue Scabiosa caucasica. The latter reminded me so strongly of happy
    days at my step grandfather's nursery in Wallingford, where he grew
    them by the acre for cut flower: my Turkish jaunt hinted at how I
    should try to use them in my current garden.

    Christopher Lloyd loved pairing gaudy Armenian cranesbill (Geranium
    psilostemon) with yellow verbascums. Photograph: imageBROKER/Alamy

    But star colour combination of the trip was that of the gaudy Armenian
    cranesbill (Geranium psilostemon) alongside a butch herbaceous daisy.
    This geranium is a "love it, or hate it" plant amongst gardeners for
    it has impossibly brilliant magenta flowers, with an appliqué tracery
    of shiny jet-black veins (to guide visiting bees, I am told).
    Christopher Lloyd, always happy to upset gardening good taste in his
    planting and writing, loved the plant, and grew it through sunny
    yellow verbascums (ouch!). "Shame on them", he wrote, of those who
    plumped for the softer-toned clone,'Bressingham Flair'. Well, I am
    sure that he would have loved the Turkish pairing, just a simple
    mixing of this plant with rich yolk-orange Inula orientalis. The
    latter plant is a stout herbaceous daisy, roughly knee-high, with an
    abundance of large daisy flowers two to three inches across, each with
    a ring of long eyelash-like ray florets. They grew together in short
    grass by the acre: would these tough perennials survive in a grassy
    garden meadow setting back at home?

    Geranium psilostemon and Inula orientalis growing together on a slope
    in the Pontic mountains in Turkey. Photograph: Bob Gibbons

    Some of the best structural associations were found in and around the
    high, wet forests on the lower slopes of the Pontic Alps. Bold-leaved
    butterburs and groundsels grew amongst vast swathes of ferns and the
    handsomely-foliaged Rubus caucasica, something akin to plantings by
    our Victorian forebears. In some cases the schemes were so very
    simple: grand sweeps of the shuttlecock fern (Matteucia
    struthiopteris) under the lofty canopy of coppiced multi-stemmed
    alders on steep wet slopes. Elsewhere, these grand plant assemblages
    included bold patches of colour provided by gigantic forms of familiar
    herbaceous friends: flat-topped heads of creamy-white Achillea
    grandiflora, massive clumps of soft blue Campanula lactiflora and vast
    platter-like heads of the hogweedsHeracleum trachyloma and H.
    platytaenia (not ones to introduce into gardens).

    Yet it was on the open steppes close to the Georgian border that a
    simple blend of feathergrass (an unidentified Stipa species), inky
    blue-blackSalvia nemorosa (reminiscent of S. 'Mainacht'), and a fresh
    lemon small scabious (Scabiosa columbaria ssp. ochroleuca) really
    bowled me over, combining stunning colour with clever placing of
    plants. These three dominants were neither so uniformly mixed as the
    frankly hideous annual flower meadows that are springing up on our
    municipal parks and road verges, nor so relatively clumpy as the
    naturalistic plantings of the New Perennial Movement. The scabious and
    feathergrass provided the most magically light and airy foil to the
    clumps of salvia, the whole effect punctuated by more isolated
    individual clumps of other plants.

    I don't know whether feathergrasses will survive the winter-wet here
    in Devon, nor whether geraniums and inulas will grow in grassy meadows
    and tolerate an annual close shave of the scythe. Nor do I know
    whether or not these magnificent swathes of intense floweriness can be
    effectively recreated at the garden scale. Rest assured that I am
    going the try over the coming years, and I'll let you know how I get
    on.

    * Andy Byfield is a founder of the wild plant charity Plantlife, is
    writing a book on plants and landscape, and tussles with two acres of
    walled garden in south Devon

    http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/gardening-blog/2015/jan/08/nature-by-design



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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