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Planting of Delos at Sissinghurst October 2019. Designed by Dan Pearson Studio


Renovation pruning of the weeping pear in the white garden Sissinghurst


gardeners have built, cultivated and maintained gardens to meet the needs and desires of their owners for centuries. Whether it was as a showcase of the latest gardening taste, to cultivate a collection of rare plants, or to reflect the owner’s personality.


The gardens at Sissinghurst Castle in Kent, now in the ownership of the National Trust for over 50 years, were created together by Vita Sackville-West and her husband Harold Nicholson between 1930 and 1962. They can be said to run through the veins of any gardener for their beauty and application of high horticultural practice.


But the gardens at Sissinghurst maintained by professionals were perhaps not the gardens that amateur gardener Vita created. When Troy Scott-Smith took the role of head gardener for Sissinghurst in 2013, he started to question how closely the gardens reflected Vita. He commissioned research to better understand her original vision and found that the gardens had evolved overtime as a series of small projects undertaken in-house and when finances allowed.


This reminder prompted a project to re- imagine the gardens as if Vita and Harold still owned them. It has involved the completion of garden projects, such as Delos, a garden of Mediterranean plants inspired by their visit to Greece, which had been abandoned due to the cold aspect of the site and lack of available plants at the time.


46 Listed Heritage Magazine January/February 2020


Meadows around the oast houses have been re-introduced, as have over 100 rose cultivars that Vita had grown in the rose garden. Most significant was the change that Troy had to instil in his garden team about how to garden at Sissinghurst. This was to create the sense of a garden with plants that had colonised a ruin rather than one that had plants being cultivated within one. Allowing rambling roses to billow with apparent freedom over walls, loosening the cutting regime of the box hedges and encouraging seedlings to grow in wall crevices and paving joints.


It had taken 50 years of National Trust ownership, more than Harold and Vita’s 30-year tenure, and three head gardeners for the decision at Sissinghurst to reinstate the gardens as a closer representation of their ownership, the significance of which had sparked their original acquisition for conservation by the Trust.


This doesn’t suggest that maintenance of the gardens during the intervening years had been wrong, as they were kept at an exceptional standard of presentation. However, it does highlight the role that research has in making informed decisions about a garden, the responsibility of any owner to carefully manage change and evidences the art and creativity of gardening in historic gardens.


To learn more about gardening in historic gardens or to find a gardener with experience of and training in historic gardens you might like to peruse the following:


Garden masterclasses – www.gardenmasterclass.org


Learning with experts www.learningwithexperts.com/experts/ dr-audrey-gerber


Professional Gardeners Guild traineeship www.pgg.org.uk/the-professional- gardeners-guild-traineeship


Historic and Botanic Garden Bursary Scheme www.hbgtp.org.uk


FURTHER READING Gardens and Landscapes in Historic Garden Conservation edited by Dr Marion Harney, Published by Wiley-Blackwell (2014)


Rooted in History: A Garden Conservation Manual edited by James Parry Published by National Trust (1999)


VOLUNTEERING: https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/ features/work-in-our-gardens


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