The English Garden

Protect & ADAPT

The garden at Shieldhill is a tranquil place. Enclosed within its 200-year-old sandstone walls is a contemporary garden of clean lines and simple planting, where water flows gently through pond and rill, traditional scents of lavender and roses fill the air, and a wildflower meadow hums with bees. Beyond the walls, grass paths wind through woodland trees.

For Nicola and Jim Gordon, Shieldhill represents a return home. Nicola’s work as a petroleum engineer in the oil industry meant that they and their family lived abroad, in Scandinavia and elsewhere in Europe, for some 30 years, always in rented houses. It was only eight years ago that they decided to look for a place of their own in Jim’s native Scotland, and fell for Shieldhill near Biggar in South Lanarkshire.

The property was once the kitchen

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The English Garden

The English Garden5 min readArchitecture
The Great ESCAPE
It would be difficult to miss Ivy Cottage. It sits in a splendid, exposed position, but the visibility is more about the colour of the house: a splendid warm ochre that sings out among the trees. When garden designer Matthew Childs and his partner mo
The English Garden5 min read
Food for Thought
Summer is here and with it an opportunity to add plants to improve your borders – although do remember to keep watering any new additions, particularly if the weather is hot and dry. One of the joys of gardening is this process of constant review as
The English Garden3 min read
TRADE SECRETS: Training Cane Fruit
Cool, damp springs are ideal for blackberries, summer- and autumn-fruiting raspberries, and their crosses, which include loganberries and tayberries. The only minor inconvenience is keeping them under control once they get growing, but making sure th

Related Books & Audiobooks