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A corner of James Hitchmough's garden. |
Very interesting to
spend the day in Sheffield recently, with a group from the Landscape
Institute. I have a day with the North-East and the Yorkshire group
annually now it seems, running a day workshop on planting design.
This year we all met up in Sheffield, to see how some of the
innovation famously coming out of the university's Department of
Landscape gets applied in practice.
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Another corner - Eryngium proteiflorum in front, the Mexican species James says got him interested in horticulture as a kid. |
An early morning visit
to
Prof. James Hitchmough's garden was a good start to the day, with
an incredible botanic garden laid out below some gnarled apple trees.
Only a year old, much has been grown from wild-collected seed, and it
represents James's cutting edge approach to plant selection with
potential to be used in British public spaces – a lot is South
African, so it has an exuberantly exotic look. We are so
extraordinarily lucky here, in being able to mix and match plants
from so many different climate zones, and with minimal risk of
anything becoming invasive.
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Sue France talking to Landscape Institute members |
Most of the day was
spent in south Sheffield, in the Manor estate, a large area of
low-rise public housing which used to have the reputation as one of
the worst in Britain. A community interest company,
Green Estate,
has however helped turn things around, and acted as a way of applying
some of the landscape department's innovation into practice. Nigel
Dunnett (another prof. at the uni. here) has long used the area as a
test ground for his spectacular annual seed mixes, which Green Estate
now sell.
Headed
by the amazingly dynamic Sue France, Green Estate is now working on
its own seed mixes, which incorporate biennials and perennials and
are designed for longer-than-one-year seeded plantings. Not quite
sure how long, as the mixes do not seem to have many reliably
long-lived clonal species (as you should know by now plant longevity
is of many of the bees in my bonnet), but maybe they are just hiding.
Anyway, inexpensive seed mixes which can be used to create plantings
which thrive with minimal care for a few year are a great boon,
especially for areas which are 'awaiting developments'.
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A Green Estate mix - 'Treasure Chest' |
The
most interesting part of the day was spent in Manor Fields park, 25
hectares of land which once used to get 350 burnt out cars a year
(now it gets none). It is an extraordinarily good example of how to
maximise impact with minimal resources.
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Annual planting near the Green Estate HQ |
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Annuals at the entrance to Manor Fields |
Brian
Hemingway and one other colleague maintain this, and additionally a
couple of pocket parks. At first sight, much of Manor Fields is
'wasteland' – brambles, willowherb and scrub – a fantastic
wildlife reserve, but not most peoples idea of a park. Look and
explore further and you realise that there is a lot more to it. Here
is the essence of how minimal management works:
Create
a good first impression: the entrance to the park gets a lot spent
on it: highly inventive railings and street furniture good enough to
count as sculpture, bright annuals, quality perennial planting.
Sturdy
fencing to keep out stolen cars and dirt bikers.
Neat,
mown, edges makes wild areas look deliberate.
Mowing
frequency is maintained, so that all mown areas look very well cared
for. “If we have to reduce mowing for any reason, we let areas go
wild rather than mow less frequently” says Brian, as infrequent
mowing never looks good and creates an un-cared for look.
Zero
tolerance of rubbish.
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Innovative sculptural street furniture keeps out the hoods driving stolen cars, looks good and makes cutting-edge design truly universal and democratic. |
One
of the most interesting aspects to Manor Fields, are the perennials
which have been naturalised here. Not many, but they certainly
make an impact and illustrate the potential of the limited range of
perennials robust enough to survive grass competition. Geraniums
under the edge of tree or shrub canopy, where grass competition is
reduced, are successful; including the late-flowering Geranium
soboliferum, which I have never seen used this way before. Of course
some of these here are the outcome of the university landscape
department's influence. A goldenrod I have hardly ever seen as a
garden plant, Solidago
rigida, was
clearly doing very well – almost the botanist's thrill of seeing it
in the wild!
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Geranium soboliferum |
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Solidago rigida |
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Geranium endressii underneath Hippophae rhamnoides |
Noel, thanks for an interesting talk at the Palmstead study day. All the Sissinghurst team enjoyed it. Helen
ReplyDeleteIt's great to see plants of the world growing in semi natural settings. Some startling combinations.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this post. I had no idea there was so many going on around Sheffield. The Manor Fields park developments sound fantastic.
ReplyDelete