My partner and I have had a house in France for nearly 30 years, and for the last 18 have lived there about half the year. We moved house in 2006, buying a rambling ruin with mediaeval foundations, 2 overgrown fields and a lake. Since then we have been designing, clearing and planting a garden of about 5 acres. Almost everything apart from the hedging and some of the trees, is home grown – from seed or cuttings, and this is the story of how it was done…and how our French friends, neighbours and the local press reacted! The garden was opened to the public for the first time in 2015.
Views: 367 | Enquiries: 0I've been lecturing "live" and on-line about every aspect of the history of gardens, landscapes, as well as plant hunting /plants/botany for more than 25 years to gardens clubs, U3A groups, and to museums like the V&A & across higher education. I discovered the subject because after a career as a head teacher I took very early retirement and went back into education full time on my own account. I did a four year diploma course in Garden History which led on to an MA in Historical Research and then a PhD at Birkbeck College, University of London on The Gardens and Gardeners of Later Stuart London.
I was a trustee of The Gardens Trust, the national campaigning body for the protection and support of our historic parks, gardens and designed landscapes and chaired their education committee from 2016 until 2023. I also write a weekly blog for them which you can find at thegardenstrust.blog
I've run courses on the history of gardens [and many other things] at Birkbeck and City Lit. I'm currently an honorary Senior Research Fellow at the University of Buckingham and run a Masters Course in Garden History as well as offering supervision to PhD students.
If all that sounds posh - rest assured I'm not!
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