garden's descriptions are largely written by the owners and become charming vignettes of their labours of love.... for example this entry from my dog-eared and heavily inscribed "Wiltshire Gardens 1985" leaflet states...
Foscote Gardens Grittleton, 5 m NW of Chippenham. A420 Chippenham-Bristol; after 2 m turn right on to B4039 to Yatton Keynell; fork right for Grittleton; in village proceed 2 m; just over motorway turn right at Xrds; house on right. Plants for sale also garden cushions. NO DOGS. Home-made TEAS at Foscote Stables. Combined charge both gardens 70p, Chd. 20p, Sun. June 30 (2-6)
Foscote Stables (Mr & Mrs Beresford Worswick). 2 1/2 acres; many clematis; shrub roses; unusual shrubs & trees; small collection ornamental ducks; adjoining Victorian cottage garden.
Foscote House (Mr & Mrs John Lendrum) adjacent, a C16 Cotswold stone house visited by Cromwell during Civil War (not open) surrounded by compact 1 1/2 acre garden; mainly lawns, shrubs & trees planted within last 15 years.
On other occasions we would choose a route following a river or valley and on more than one occasion have followed the upper course of the Salisbury Avon between Upavon and East Chisenbury (Medieval Priory in 5 acre garden) to Enford (The Grange - Queen Anne farmhouse), Fittleton, Netheravon, Figheldean through Amesbury and down to Lake to the north of, and Teffont Magna to the west of Salisbury... but that is a serious trip for a complete weekend being in excess of 20 miles!
On the other hand you can choose to visit just a single garden, savour the scented atmosphere, feel the sun's soothing warmth on every pore of your skin and refreshing breeze on every every hair of your body... quite literally. Because the owners of the Abbey House Gardens, situated next to Malmesbury Abbey host an open day au naturel. Ian Pollard, award-winning architect turned garden designer, and his wife Barbara love to dig, plant and prune in the buff and became known on BBC TVs Gardeners' World as the "Naked Gardeners"... although they only normally garden in the nude when the gates to the public are closed.
In the last ten years the Pollards have completely transformed the 5-acre garden surrounding their former Benedictine monastery... and there is an illustrated gardening book available on their website. Having lived in Malmesbury in the 1980s I remember the Abbey House being quite sombre and run down... I also remember the Pollards' wonderful formal gardens (centre image, third row, main photo) at Hazlebury Manor, near Box, on the Wiltshire-Avon boundary, and how, on open days, he would dash around, full of energy, selling potted shrubs and trays of plants from his extensive nursery.
As I also enjoy being naked in our small French courtyard garden - I find there's nothing more invigorating after digging and weeding than turning the garden hose on myself - I will certainly visit the Abbey House Gardens during a "bare-it-all" open day... and make amends for the French family who declined to even visit the gardens fully clothed. Really... I thought it was the English who were "sniffy" about these things!
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