The English Garden

Out of the Shadows

f you have ever been to the opera at Glyndebourne in midsummer, you will know that apart from delectable music, one of its deepest pleasures is to find yourself in East Sussex in the late afternoon with time to enjoy the way the shadows – of both the parkland trees and the elegantly strolling picnickers – grow ever longer

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

More from The English Garden

The English Garden5 min read
To Mow Or Not To Mow?
No Mow May is something of a Marmite topic for gardeners. While it’s easy for all of us to applaud local authorities leaving swathes of roadside verges and larger parks to become floriferous havens for wildlife, it’s a bit different when it comes to
The English Garden5 min read
A Sleight OF HAND
At first glance, the splendid garden at Daglingworth House in Gloucestershire appears classically English. After all, there are many characteristic elements: fine parkland trees, including a red oak and a copper beech; a walled garden with a rose per
The English Garden4 min read
Picture PERFECT
Often described as being at ‘the edge of the world’, East Prawle is a small coastal village in south Devon with a scattering of houses and farms, a duck pond and a village green. There is also a well-known pub, The Pigs Nose Inn, that is the heart of

Related Books & Audiobooks