The English Garden

Changing ROOMS

Perhaps more than most people, gardeners understand our reliance on the sun and its life-giving light. The seven-acre gardens surrounding Mitton Manor in Staffordshire are a perfect celebration of this. Visit on a crisp autumn day to be greeted by a veteran beech tree, its russet leaves filtering and reflecting the soft seasonal rays. That’s the starting point for a journey through garden rooms furnished with sumptuous planting that invite you to pause and be still, before enticing you on to the next stage of the unfolding drama. En route, it is the way the garden’s planting and structures play with the light that is so entrancing. One is teased by light and shade and dazzled by beams reflected from steel, water or glass

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

More from The English Garden

The English Garden3 min read
TRADE SECRETS: Hydrangea Cuttings
When it comes to propagating hydrangeas, one person knows more about the subject than most, and that’s Maurice Foster. Holder of a Victoria Medal of Honour, member of the RHS Woody Plant Committee and trustee of the Tree Register, he first worked wit
The English Garden1 min read
Contributors
Mark has been a garden photographer for many years. His own garden at Bowhay House in Devon is featured in this issue on page 81 and is the subject of a book being published in August this year. A head gardener for more than 30 years, Jane is also a
The English Garden5 min read
Tresillian in May
Late-spring sun shines on the Victorian walled garden at Tresillian in May, enhancing the protective microclimate that’s so valuable for growing flowers, fruit and vegetables. Wallflowers, forget-me-nots and lupins bloom in cheerful profusion. Clemat

Related Books & Audiobooks