Gardens can have many shapes, and while we often associate them with grand, old estates and wide landscapes, there’s just as much pleasure to be found in detailed and small arrangements.
The inside of the glasshouse there
The front garden is a superb collection of specimen shrubs, trees, alpines and some herbaceous plants, combined with fitting architecture as well as hard landscaping, and was done in 2011/2012.
One of the many troughs at Coolwater Garden, here planted up with Sempervivum
In fact, they grow so well that Kevin changed the layout of some troughs, with a cast iron plate at the back and some stones put vertically against it. This way, the plants can’t overgrow the stones, and the picture of a mini-mountain habitat stays unspoiled.
The treasure of the whole place though must be the more recently added green house. Built three years ago, it now contains a mesmerising collection of rare alpines and succulents. The south-facing side is made with limestone, the north-facing with slate, and the east-facing at the end is home to succulents. Limestone keeps the pH slightly alkaline, slate on the other hand acidic.