The English Garden

Living LANDSCAPE

When Surrey garden designer Helen Thomas and her husband moved into Hill Farm just outside Dorking in 1997, with a baby on the way, they had no idea of the adventure that lay ahead of them. The house is well named, since it sits on the side of a hill with panoramic views in every direction, taking in the Downs, the Weald and the Surrey Hills. The previous owners were not gardeners. “What we inherited was a sloping field with a few mature fruit trees and alas these slowly succumbed to disease and wind,” says Helen.

“I’d had a fairly high-pressure career in HR, and wanted to find something that I could do for myself and yet be sufficiently flexible

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The English Garden

The English Garden5 min read
To Mow Or Not To Mow?
No Mow May is something of a Marmite topic for gardeners. While it’s easy for all of us to applaud local authorities leaving swathes of roadside verges and larger parks to become floriferous havens for wildlife, it’s a bit different when it comes to
The English Garden2 min read
People to Meet
The landscape designer on the structure and meaning behind her Chelsea debut garden, a space that supports the survivors of stroke My earliest memories are of hiding in the greenhouse as a kid. I’d sit amid the greenery and smell the tomatoes and cuc
The English Garden5 min read
Between Two WORLDS
It is interesting how a lifelong fascination with plants and gardens can be initiated by subtle early influences; among mine I’m sure were the children’s novels written by Cambridgeshire author Lucy Boston, of which The Children of Green Knowe is bes

Related