Saturday, 19 December 2015

Chelsea Flower Show 2016 - Forever Freefolk cont'd 2


Inspiration comes in many forms it can be a word, or in this case it can be a picture with elements that give the basis for the ideas to create a conceptual garden. This wonderful fishing hut with the eel traps floating above the crystal waters of the river test, gave rise to the floating pathway running through the garden. The idea of some structure as a feature hovering over this path way was the next element to be designed, for this we went to the microscopic plankton that make up chalk.


These organisms are called coccolithospores which group together forming a coccosphere which is what we based our feature on. Above is the initial ideas of how it would look hovering over the water source. But as with all ideas and the practicality of functional design it has changed slightly.      


This was our first working model.
After this and many more detailed alterations that make the design operational the below cartoon is the finished article. Ready to star being put together in May 2016 for everyone to see.






Tuesday, 8 December 2015

Chelsea Flower Show - Forever Freefolk continues 1

This is very much a note by note progress of the way we worked to achieve securing a show garden at Chelsea flower show.

A show garden on main avenue at Chelsea flower show, how long can this take to go from bidding for sponsorship to applying for the space?

In truth we had 48hours to put a proposal forward to the sponsors Brewin Dolphin, one of the most renowned Chelsea sponsors.
After this a short list, which we made and then the need to do a presentation to really make the bid stick. Preparation time for this another 36 hours, talk about a tight time-scale.

Where do you begin but with a starting sketch from numerous ideas. To be honest that was not the starting point. It started with a scrap of A4 with various single words to describe the wonderful area we live in here at Freefolk in Hampshire. We live in the most amazing landscape, that over the geological era has changed significantly, through the ages.

The underlying area is made of chalk a very interesting material that can act like a sponge.

Chalk was laid down over a prolonged heating of the oceans many millennia ago. The seas were at 20 degrees Celsius the plank-tonic life was rich, the dying bodies of these coccolithophores end up on the seabed. The skeletons made from calcium carbonate of these creatures are known as coccoliths and it is this that is the backbone of the chalk.

How to integrate this beautiful natural structure into the garden design, was the next step.

All the ideas of what to base our design on had been narrowed down to the Chalk streams, Chalkdownland, Local industry and the effects upon the area.
The industry heritage is one of security paper-making. Portals make banknote paper, with the watermarks and silver threads for increasing the security of banknotes. This was all due to the Huguenots who moved here in the 1730's.
The river and path running through the garden are the silver thread.


Many of our naturally occurring features of Hampshire are utilised within the concept of this display garden.

The main underlying concept of Chalk streams is key to the story.
'Chalkstreams are our Rainforests' and are a very much a fragile important ecosystem that need protecting for our future.
Too much water extraction and we could end up with dried up streams as in our concept garden. Depicted by gravel planting and coccolith gabion stepping stones.


There are many elements to all designs, with various ideas coming and going.
Many times the constraints are monetary, as in many things in life meaning other paths have to be taken to reach the same goal.


Friday, 4 December 2015

Bright and beautiful cut flower plant collection

This collection of plants I have chosen for ease of growing and flower colour. They are certainly not subtle but bright and beautiful enough to lift your mood on seeing the gaiety.

Geum "Totally Tangerine"
This is the best new breeding in Geum for a long while,with its large single flowers in a soft tangerine. This colour is able to be used with various other combinations. It is ideal for cutting as it has long stems and numerous buds per stem that open over a long period. Grows in most soils and prefers a sunny site.
It flowers continuously throughout the season making it a really great garden and cut flower variety.



Achillea "Pomegranette" Tutti Frutii series
The Tutti Frutti™ Series of Yarrows were bred in the Netherlands. They are more compact and bushy, than other forms. They have rich pomegranate red flowers of very uniform size, with large individual florets that hold their colour. Excellent for cutting, deadheading any old flowers throughout the season will encourage more new buds.  They are suitable for the mixed herbaceous borders or amongst grasses, they also are suitable for growing in containers.



Aster Little Carlow
This wonderful aster is a cross  between A.cordifolius and A.novi-belgii producing masses of lilac/purple flowers in Autumn. Just an aside which I am not going to delve into but these are going to be known by the name Symphyotrichum Little Carlow.
Do not be misled by the name Little Carlow it has nothing to do with its height it is named after a hill.




Lychnis Gardeners World
Most gardeners will be very aware of the normal Lychnis coronaria with the single flowers which can become a nuisance due to its habit of seeding freely. This double form will not seed but does produce a profusion of flowers throughout the summer season. A sunny dry site is ideal for this plant giving a great contrast with its silver foliage.




Salvia Madeline
This unusual two tone salvia was a chance seedling chosen by Peit Oudulf in the Netherlands.
It is happy in a sunny site grown either in a grass border or with mixed planting. By picking regularly or deadheading it blooms well through the summer.