One of Adam Baros's plantings at the Dendrological Garden in Pruhonice, which has survived a scorching summer |
My recent post about the wonderful garden of
Berchigranges in the Vosges mountains of France, was at the end of a
trip which involved driving to Hermannshof and then on to Prague
(Pruhonice actually) to do some teaching and then back across
southern Germany. The Czech garden tradition and present, I have blogged about before, and it was good to be back again so soon.
Adam Baroš had got me a long to run two days of workshops at the
Dendrologial Park, and I felt very honoured to be the first person to
teach in a brand-new building. There is a feeling here of positive,
reasonably well-funded looking forward.
The city of Plzen in western Czech Republic has some of the most extensive perennial plantings in any city centre I have seen anywhere. |
Also in city centre Plzen, vast arcades of ivy, very clever, and something i have never seen before. |
The literally hot topic
of conversation on both my trips to central Europe this year, which
included Austria a few weeks ago, was the summer. Many days over
30°C, a maximum (at
Pruhonice) of 38.5°C (in
the shade) and just-above ground temperatures in the sun an
incredible lawn-killing 50°C.
And no rain for eight weeks. There has been rain since and much has
recovered by the time of my mid-September visit, but there is clearly
going to be a lot of long-term damage to woody plants, with many
losses. Garden staff say that surface-rooting species like Hamamelis
and Rhododendron are particularly badly affected, and they expect
many to die. It is a frightening foretaste of things to come, if, as
predicted, global warming and climate change continue.
It was good to have so
many people at the workshops and from such a range of backgrounds,
and to have quite a few come up from Slovakia on both days. There
were some familiar faces such as Prof. Dagmar Hillova who teaches
landscape and planting design at a University at Nitra in Slovakia
and Martina Šášiková who runs Victoria - trvalková škôlka
(www.victoria-trvalky.sk) a huge wholesale perennial nursery near
Nitra. I said I would do a planting workshop for her next year, to
celebrate the nursery's fifteenth anniversary. It was great to have
the Slovaks along – my wife Jo worked in Bratislava from 1993-1995
so we feel we know the country well. There were worries at the time
about the viability of the newly independent country since the saying
was that “the Czechs make the boots and the Slovaks the laces”.
Not any more – the country has done well economically and
politically and they are in the euro, and there has not been a squeak
about their letting the new currency down, unlike the southern
members of the eurobelt. And of course, economic development drives
an interest in gardening and public landscaping.
Bettina Jaugstetter plantings at ABB |
On my way I had visited
the fabulous Hermannshof garden at Weinheim in Germany's Rhineland,
somewhere I ideally try to get to once a year. Director Cassian
Schmidt is also heavily involved in teaching planting design at a new
university of Geissenheim. His wife, Bettina Jaugstetter, is a garden
designer who is also now developing planting mixes. (For those who
need an introdction to the German concept of Mixed Planting look here).
I had seen spectacular pictures of her work at the ABB factory, a
nearby manufacturer of electrical equipment and so I was delighted to
visit and see these now well-established plantings. Bettina's
plantings are not in soil, but a mineral based substrate similar to
that used on green roofs. A minimal organic matter content helps
provide a stable and predictable rooting environment and reduces
opportunities for weed growth, so reducing maintenance. At the end of
the year, everything is cut back and removed. As with mineral
substrate based green roofs this must inevitably result in a reduced
value to the biodiversity value of the planting since there is
limited resources for the development of a soil ecology – the
trade-off is the stability of the environment for maintenance
purposes and the incredibly high visual value of the plantings in the
workplace.
Later that day, we went
off to see some plantings in Ludwigshafen, where park director Harald
Sauer has created a series of spectacular annual and perennial
plantings in the city's Ebert Park and at the entrance to a major
cemetery. I understood his budget to be pretty limited, which makes
these all the more impressive. Some of his work is completely new –
great snaking beds of perennials in the cemetery for example but
others are about the imaginative remaking or enlivening of existing
features made in the 20th century and needing renewal. The
plantings are very successful, looking very vibrant now, although in
looking at them I do ask the question, what do they look like earlier
in the year? One can imagine bulbs in here, but what about the
May-July interest? I do sometimes worry that all the focus we have
put on late-season perennials and winter seedheads has drawn
attention away from the early summer period.
Rows of watering cans used for graveside plantings - rather sad people feel they have to lock them up! |
There are some more pictures of the Ebert Park here, and of the Ludwigshafen Cemetery here.
The Museum of GardenCulture displayed only a part of what is clearly a huge collection of tools and equipment, and which, from what I was able to work out, is divided into several parts which move around different locations each year. Far more impressive than anything we have in Britain and which knocks London's Garden Museum into the proverbial 'cocked hat' – although since the museum are undergoing a huge rebuild next year, we can but live in hope.
* * * * *
Further on down the
road I popped into the Gaissmayer nursery near Ulm which has a
huge range of perennials plus lots of whacky artworks and an attached
'museum of garden culture'. The sales model for perennials seems
similar to that of many other nurseries over here and in The
Netherlands, small plants mostly in 9cm pots, at some prices –
often only 3 euros a plant, half the price of the 2litre pots of
perennials which now seems to be the standard in Britain. It does
seem to be a very different business model.
The Museum of GardenCulture displayed only a part of what is clearly a huge collection of tools and equipment, and which, from what I was able to work out, is divided into several parts which move around different locations each year. Far more impressive than anything we have in Britain and which knocks London's Garden Museum into the proverbial 'cocked hat' – although since the museum are undergoing a huge rebuild next year, we can but live in hope.
If you like this blog, why not check out my e-books, which are round-ups of some writing I did for Hortus
magazine back in the early 2000s, along with an interview with the
amazing Beth Chatto. There is also the first in a series of planting design textbooks, delivered in collaboration with My Garden School.
You can read them on Kindle, or Kindle packages for smartphones or the computer. You can find them on my Amazon page here. You will also find my soap opera for gardeners - currently running at eight episodes.
You can read them on Kindle, or Kindle packages for smartphones or the computer. You can find them on my Amazon page here. You will also find my soap opera for gardeners - currently running at eight episodes.
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