Design, at best, is an emergent process - and essentially so when it is about gardens. As much as designed gardens at events like the Chelsea Flower Show are inspiring and lovely to look at, they are snapshots for the week of the show. Deterministic design works for a fleeting moment. Making a real garden is a rich practice of design. It is at the end of the year that I have spent on a new stage of putting out probing designs on Bron Ceris’s garden. The coming seasons will reveal what works and what will be changed: a process of reflection that will come sitting in the garden or weeding a flower bed - and in narrating stories in this blog.
Cynefin is a Welsh word that does not easily translate. it is often translated as habitat - but that is only a beginning. It has the same notion that sheep farmers have of hefted: a flock of sheep that know their bit of mountain that is passed down from the ewe to her lambs. In Welsh it carries more meaning. In humans it carries with it a sense of place, home-ness, of shared cultural knowledge, a belonging. Cynefin has also been used by Dave Snowden to describe approaches to managing complexity. Within this framework there is a description for working with the complex - a situation which is new, where causes and effects are expected but are as yet unknown. This describes the situation when you are making garden. Will the plant like the spot? Will it work with its neighbours? What extra interventions will be needed to sustain and keep it viable? Does it fit with the life habits of those for whom the garden is home (wild and domestic)?
Cynefin suggests a way to deal with the complex. You need to perform safe-to-fail experiments. Take many readings/reflections of the consequences and then amplify the successes and attenuate the failures. This is the approach I am taking in Bron Ceris.
As with all design I work with known constraints and opportunities - which will be described as we blog further. And as with all design - we will be working towards the desirable. However that begs the question “what is desirable in this context?” It has to satisfy the requirements of Sue and I, it has to fulfill my creative needs, it needs to continue to be fun and challenging, it has to live within a budget, allow us to go on holidays and balance carefully the joy of gardening with the chores of gardening. Low maintenance gardens are for the surrounds of office buildings, roundabouts and public conveniences - gardening is part of the pleasure. I want to create wow-factors, I also want to create space which is out-of-time - a chance for garden mindfulness.
Yesterday I dug out the bearded Iris in the top terrace centre bed. They had been there since the bed was created about 4 years ago.They produced about 5 flowers in that time,took up a lot of ground and the leaves were torn, windswept and fundamentally manky. They did not deserve the garden space devoted to them. I can not think where I might place them. Currently they languish, loosely potted.
What to put in their place? The bed is the sunniest spot in the garden.The rest of the planting in the bed is:
Nature's Bounty today included:
Salad Bowl lettuce Figs (brown turkey) -which I meant to photograph but they were eaten with Parma Ham and the lettuce - totally delicious. Basil - as apart of a mango, chilli and basil salsa Runner Beans
and I harvested the main crop potatoes : Sarpo Mira - which were sampled as sauté.
Mira are a variety of potato developed the research team in Henfaes in Bangor to be blight resistant. In first inspection it seems they would make very good chips and roast spuds. I will photograph them in a future post. They have ranged from new potato size to a good half-kilo per spud. Yield very satisfactory - taste was good. Maybe tomorrow the "mash" test.
A lot has happened in the garden since the demise of Posterous. Over the next few months I will post on what will be current developments and there will be some catch up posts.
The main developments have been:
When I see as this list I realise how much work has been done - and moreover how much fun is going to be had now that most of the hard landscape work is over. The previous 2 years were mainly about slate paving on the terraces and the recreation of the terrace beds close to the house. From now on it is mostly about the plants.
Currently there are eight areas of distinct planting:
And there is a small wildlife pond. Some of this is going to change over the next few years - especially as I have removed most of the lawn.
Sue looks after the beds at the front of the house.
Over the next month the paths will be completed and I will concentrate on the Japanese area.