Friday 12 April 2013

Bluebell cottage garden in rural Cheshire

Cottage garden in rural Cheshire

Bluebell Cottage Gardens and Lodge Lane Nursery- is a beautiful hidden
gem tucked away in a quiet corner of the Weaver Valley, Cheshire. During spring,
its bluebell woodlands put on a spectacular show and in summer the herbaceous
borders come to life in a whirlwind of colour and foliage. 

cottage garden tips
Bluebell cottage garden in rural Cheshire
Backing on lo the Trent and Mersey Canal, (he land features a garden and plant nursery, 
a three-acre wildflower meadow and ancient bluebell woodland. The nursery is an RHS partner
nursery, specialising in hardy herbaceous perennials, but it's a far cry from the
commercialism and large-scale production of corporate plant shops. Owners Sue
and David Beesley deliberately avoided turning Bluebell Cottage Gardens into
a one-stop garden shop, preferring to let visitors spend some time exploring the
scenery and picking up new skills. "It's never going to be some kind of Wyvale," says
Sue, describing the cosy tearoom which offers self-service tea and coffee, locally-
made cakes and Cheshire ice cream. "The idea of this little place is that you make
your own tea, sit down, read some books. It's quite nice because we get people
wandering in and perching up for the afternoon during a hailstorm."

Bluebell cottage garden in rural Cheshire
Bluebell cottage garden in rural Cheshire
In keeping with this informal set up. Sue has added a new 'demonstration
vegetable patch', complete with raised beds featuring classic English vegetables,
permanent fruits and salad. Here, visitors arc free to take notes, swap lips and
generally learn more about vegetable growing. "We just show people round and
exchange ideas, and people can discuss their own vegetable plots," says Sue.

"I think it's especially useful for relatively novice veg growers. You might want
someone to show you around their allotment, but how do you go about that — if
you walk onto an allotment there's usually all these people looking fierce and busy!
So we've set up ours as a place to stand around and chat about vegetable growing.
We've also got a little shop with some basic seeds, plants and organic fertiliser."

cottage garden tips
Bluebell cottage garden in rural Cheshire

COTTAGE GARDEN ADDRESS BOOK:

Bluebell Cottage Gardens    Lodge Lane Nursery is open Wednesday to Sunday and on Bank Holidays.
To plan your visit or to find out about the education and leisure events held throughout the year, visit: www.lodgelanenursery.co.uk, email: info@lodgelane.co.uk or call 01928 713 718.

Sue is creating a garden for this year's RHS Show at Tatton Park, from 22 to 26 July. For further
information about the show, visit: www.rhs.org.uk/whatson/shows/tattonpark2009.
Find out more about Reaseheath College's horticulture courses at: www.reaseheath.ac.uk.

BLUEBELL COTTAGE GARDEN

Since moving into the cottage in February 2007, Sue and David have
transformed the overgrown land into a flourishing cootage garden and nursery. Apple,
cherry and pear trees can be found in a canal-side orchard, and the 1.5-acre
garden includes a pond, a rockery and an abundance of colourful flowers.

A circular wall encloses an area next to the cottage, the size of a typical
suburban back garden, where Sue uses her skills to illustrate what can be
done in a relatively small amount of space. "It's the size of most people's back
garden," she says. "I use it as a way oi encouraging people to do away with
creating straight borders around square gardens. Because in the summer you
can't see the wall, it's filled with flowers and foliage - it's really pretty."

Bluebell cottage garden in rural Cheshire

Looking to the future, determined Sue has two main ambitions for the
cottage gardens and nursery: firstly, to develop the demonstration vegetable plots; and
secondly to create a new exotics garden, inspired by late gardener and writer,
Christopher Lloyd. "Sometimes people have a very English concept of what a
garden ought to be," she says. "One of my instincts is to have a tropical garden
with plants like bananas. One of the reasons I really love Christopher Lloyd's
garden in East Sussex is that he ripped out the rose garden, planted it with
exotics and broke all the rules. He'd plant pink next to orange and say, 'Come
on then, tell me it doesn't work'."

Bluebell cottage garden in rural Cheshire
Bluebell cottage garden in rural Cheshire
It's this progressive way of gardening that drives Sue to keep changing and
evolving the gardens; creating new vistas and altering planting arrangements to
ensure a sense of continuity and flow. An archway to one of the garden's many
sections is inscribed with the words 'Cette Vic M'aime', meaning 'This life loves
me'. The site is so full of colour and such a place of tranquillity, that it's hard to
see how anyone visiting Bluebell Cottage Gardens could think otherwise.

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