Saturday, 16 July 2011

Sandesquoy Garden




 At some time in a gardener's life we have to move on and leave the place that we have worked and cherished. I thought this would be a good opportunity to look back at Sandesquoy, our garden in Orkney.

We lived in Orkney for 10 years almost to the day, arriving and leaving at midsummer. Like most houses and gardens in Orkney we lived near the sea. The views from the house over Deer Sound were breathtaking and we often photographed magnificent sunsets and misty days. We were also privileged to see the Aurora Borealis commonly known as "The Merry dancers" on a few occasions.

Our house had been a farm and was renovated before we moved in adding a conservatory at a later date. This is how it looked from the air in about 2001 prior to us building a wall alongside the polytunnel and planting more trees as a shelter belt. The field in the top left was also part of the property.


 When we first came to live here the only part of the garden that existed was the vegetable garden with a low wall round it. It hadn't been used for many years and was full of couch grass and nettles. We cleared everything by hand at Sandesquoy not discovering the joy of mini diggers and the like until late-on in the process.


This is how the established vegetable garden looked in about 2003.


Some of the produce from the garden. We did think about getting a stall at the local farmer's market but never quite got there.


 We also had a polytunnel, a keider house and cold frames with original lights given to us by an Orkney friend.



Unfortunately the Polytunnel was blown down not once but twice. We replaced the poly the first time (try finding a still day to do that in Orkney!) and it happened again after we left. But it did give us the opportunity to grow sweetcorn and peaches (I think we managed three) and have a tremendous crop of raspberries. You can grow them outside but the size of the fruit and scale of the crop is smaller.

The best advice that is always given to new gardeners in Orkney is to establish your wind break first before you try to plant anything. Did we do that? What do you think?

Consequently we probably lost more plants than I care to remember.  The ones that do best cope with the salt laden winds and these can be ferocious! A wind break of trees and/or shrubs makes an enormous difference in lessening the impact of the wind. Walls are all very well but can cause a solid block and even more turbulence on the inside of the wall. Dry stane dyking is the order of the day in Orkney. And because there is no mortar between the stones wind can be filtered though. The seasons are also shorter in Orkney which does make a difference to plantings.

The conservatory was about 7m long and was warm enough especially in the summer months to grow passion fruit and strelitzia (Bird of Paradise plant) After a while it began to look a bit like a jungle...



Outside we repaired the dykes and built new ones to make raised beds. Fortunately there was a lot of stone on site and when we had used all of it we got some from various neighbours and recycled. I was in my Gertrude Jekyll period and this is the hot border. On reflection probably it's warm rather than hot.




 Eschscholzia californica (California poppy) add a dash of colour.


More raised beds this time in a curve with steps leading to the vegetable garden.


 The rock garden outside the conservatory.


The herb and annual borders.


Astrantias have always featured in our gardens.


 The main border with Hardy geraniums "Ann Fokkard" and "Kashmir White" with Sedum spectabile.


 More hardy geraniums (is it or isn't it Johnson'e Blue?) eryngiums and allium.


The bark path through the bog garden. There is a stream to the left that is hidden from view. 



Primula Florindae in the bog garden.


I can't resist finishing with a misty view. It was part of what made this garden so special. I hope you enjoyed sharing the memories.


20 comments:

  1. Breathtaking trip down memory lane, Janet - wonder how hard it was to let go of this wonderland. So well planned and planted and overflowing with vibrancy but especially loved the bog garden. I could tarry there. The neighbours looked nice too and the conservatory a snug Tropicana.

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  2. I had forgotten just how much we loved the place and the setting. But it had become too big. That's what happens when you keep taking bits off a field and cultivating them!
    The present garden is more manageable!

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  3. Lovely. I dread the day when I shall have to leave my garden.

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  4. You may go on to somewhere else just as wonderful.

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  5. How on earth could you leave? How could you possibly leave? Couldn't you have sold the field or let it go to weed?

    Lucy

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  6. I understand about knowing when it is time to leave. I also understand about taking out bits of a field for 'just a little more room.'

    Thank you for visiting my blog. Okra requires very warm soil to germinate and grow. It is planted much later in the season than most veggie crops.

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  7. It breaks my heart to think of leaving that, but I think you walked us round your now village? Which is beautiful in a quite different way.

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  8. Thanks for that info, NellJean. I am very happy where we are now but I would like to go back and visit the Sandesquoy garden.

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  9. Beautiful garden and setting.

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  10. I would love a garden like this

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  11. What trees did you grow in Orkney?

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  12. What a beautiful place, it must have been a wrench to leave it. I am in love with your conservatory - barely room for people with all those plants! I also really like all those stone raised beds, it really helps the garden fit in the landscape somehow. Thank you for sharing it.

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  13. Boddin, we grew different types Willow (made great windbreak) Italian Alder, Swedish Whitebeam and there were already some very old elder in the garden.

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  14. What a stunning garden; thank you for sharing the photos and your memories. I can't imagine the hard work you put into it, but it certainly paid off. It must have been so hard to leave (or did bits of the garden move with you?)

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  15. We didn't take much except for tools and a few plants. I was a bit worried about transporting vine weevil to the new garden. I needn't have worried they were here already!

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  16. What a lovely garden - did you leave just because it had got too much? I thought, like Esther, that I'd want to stay and do something else with the field instead. But then I have a small garden and am desperate to move to a bigger one - maybe I'll feel differently in a few years' time!

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  17. We left Orkney for family reasons. The garden was manageable if there weren't other things happening. And with a garden design business as well something had to give!

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  18. hello Janet I enjoyed seeing and hearing about your Orkney garden, don't think you did it wrong not planting the windbreak first I did but it didn't grow as well as it was supposed to, love all those flat stones on Lewis there are lots of stones but not flatish, I'm amazed at what you acomplished in 10 years even though there are 2 of you you must have put in a lot of time, so would you recommend a mini digger? I am doing it by hand and there is just me! Frances

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  19. Oh that brings back memories! But no pictures in there of the wonderful cart wheel rim embedded at a junction of paths filled with pebbles carefully laid on their sides - I loved that bit of path! It was a beautiful house and garden - you and P created a magical place there, as you have done in Montrose too.

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  20. Hi Sarah, I have been trying to put Orkney photos on DVD (there are hundreds) so there may be another post or two with paths and cart wheels.
    Thanks for the kind comments. Maybe we'll see photos of your garden soon(?) Jx

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