Dahlias, Alliums, some fine ceramics and much, much more… a Petersham Miscellany!
Gardener and Photographer with a love of Roses and a magpie-eye for all things Horticultural
and a little music...
Just a little of the sumptuous floristry going on at Petersham Nurseries this weekend, to decorate and celebrate their 10th Birthday... Pictures painting a thousand words, and all that!
An imminent visit due for 2014 – and they are open later into the evening, but see the National Trust website for further details. An opportunity to see the best collection of Old Roses anywhere in the country. Superlative!
A joint visit today, back to Mottisfont Abbey and on to the Sir Harold Hillier Gardens in Hampshire. This Mottisfont photo gallery taken on a rather damp 21st June last year but looking superb. April cold and then lots of rain held back the flowering of the mostly once-blooming rose collection (the main show was all over by the end of May in 2011 apparently). A superlative collection of 800+ Old Roses and the lasting collection of Graham Stuart Thomas. They now have a Winter Garden and the House always seems to have an interesting exhibition. See http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/mottisfont
The Sir Harold Hillier Gardens will be new to me though I understand their well established Winter Garden is second to none.
The Telegraph 3:00PM GMT 17 Mar 2010 Train Vintage Roses with old-fashioned style By Bunny Guinness Vintage or old-fashioned roses are highly evocative. Their very names - Damask, Musk, Gallicas - are redolent of the age of cucumber sandwiches on the lawn, trysts in bowers and tennis parties. All the things we no longer have…
Continue reading ➞ Train Vintage Roses with Old-Fashioned Style…
With a thought to my rose talk tomorrow, I’m refreshing my memory about this remarkable woman, Mme Isaac Pereire
Madame Isaac Pereire (top left), with Lady Emma Hamilton (top right) and Evelyn.
I’ve touched upon this before – the history of women who gave their name to some of the finest classic old roses – for example Madam Isaac Pereire, Madam d’Arblay, Madame Pierre Oger, Madame Alfred Carriere. There are hundreds of roses with the prefix ‘Madame’ but the details of many of their lives are often unknown – or if documented, their histories deserve to be better remembered.
In many cases, especially with roses bred in the 19th century, they include the wives of eminent men – statesmen, soldiers or businessmen – while some were eminent in their own right. In many cases they were members of the rose breeder’s own family.
There is an article by Peter Scott in The Royal National Rose Society Historic Rose Journal No. 32 Autumn 2006 which gives a biography of some of these…
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This article is by Robert Calkin, originally published in The Royal National Rose Society Historic Rose Journal Autumn 2013. If you are not a member of the Historic Rose Group, articles such as these are just one reason to join! All the photography is mine. The weather this afternoon is so foul, I've enjoyed the…
Continue reading ➞ Old Rose, Tea, Fruit, Musk, Myrrh – fragrance & unlocking the secrets of the rose