
Following on from yesterday’s post considering sustainability in gardens, a new book out of the UK take the issues of sustainability and reducing negative environmental impacts to a far more holistic view. I admit I have not yet read ‘Pastoral Gardens’ by Clare Foster with photographs by Andrew Montgomery. I am not sure it is in this country yet. I am working from the interview with her on Dig Delve, the site of Dan Pearson – an English garden designer whose work we greatly admire.
I am not sure that the term ‘pastoral gardens’ will ever catch on in this country. While the word ‘pastoral’ is evocative in England with its connotations of bucolic nostalgia, here it is more likely to be associated with ‘pasture’ which immediately summons up the mental image of intensive dairy farming. I prefer the term the ‘New Naturalism’ or even our shorthand of ‘wild gardening’.

What comes through very strongly in the interview, and presumably the book, is the embrace of gardening styles that work with Nature, that prioritise biodiversity and garden practices that enhance the natural environment. It is still gardening and still focused on aesthetics, but not at the cost of damaging the environment. The author won me with this quote:
“Another uniting factor for all these gardens is their need to be gardened. So many people think that wildlife-friendly gardens are relaxed, neglected spaces, that can be left to their own devices. This is certainly not the case with the gardens we showcase in this book. The role of the gardener is almost more important than ever in overseeing, managing and editing each planting scheme, ensuring that diversity is maintained, rather than one or two species taking over.”
We saw this deterioration happen over time in in the Missouri Meadow Garden at Wisley where a dominant aster had swamped out large parts of the meadow.The role of the gardeners had fallen well short on maintaining this area and I assume it had to do with the fact it needed to be monitored and maintained in a very different way to more traditional perennial plantings and they had yet to learn those skills.

I think the author is dancing on a pin head when she attempts to differentiate current trends in naturalistic gardening from the earlier work by Irish gardener, William Robinson of Gravetye Manor in the 1880s and the more recent New Perennials movement. I may be doing her an injustice but I think she is saying that ‘pastoral gardens’ are basically the new naturalism but sitting on the higher moral ground of biodiversity. I see the difference as more linguistic. The term biodiversity is an amalgam of biological & diversity and was first coined in 1968 but didn’t enter common usage until the 1980s. Robinson didn’t have the same language to draw on but that doesn’t mean that his gardening in harmony with nature is any less for that. The loss of biodiversity, the impact of climate change and questioning of many current garden norms which run counter to the natural environment combine to give considerable urgency to the matter, but it is not necessarily new.

We have never done any scientific study to determine the changes to our immediate garden environment when we consciously switched to more sustainable practices. That would, I am guessing, involve analysing small sections across the property, maybe 10cm squares, maybe metre squares, starting before we changed our practices and then at various points along the way. Counting the number of different insects, fungi, bacteria, animals, plant species and analysing the soil profile could prove the case. We rely on anecdotal evidence. We never use slug bait but our hostas are largely clean and lush which would suggest that we have a very healthy bird population which keeps the slugs and snails in check and indeed, we see a great deal of bird activity all the time here. But we have never taken a census of the bird population or done any comparisons. Observation tells us that it is a healthier environment but that is not scientific proof so I am somewhat cautious about making sweeping environmental claims for how we garden.

When we changed the management of the grass in our park to go with a Taranaki version of a meadow, we were not at all sure how others would react. It was even more the case when we opened the Wild North Garden which is several steps further on the naturalistic, wild gardening spectrum. When you open your garden to the public, you also open yourself to being judged. It was heartening to see an overwhelmingly positive response. It may be that the visitors who dismissed it as lazy or unkempt were too polite to say so but if that is the case, they didn’t question us or express their dislike. Most visitors visibly breathed out, relaxed and often responded to the casual environment with emotion rather than detached observation. These days, we don’t open any longer so we don’t feel at all sensitive to judgement of our garden but I have thought about it recently. In a country which places a high value on immaculate maintenance and overall tidiness in open gardens, why did visitors respond so positively to large areas which were anything but?


I think it is likely the contrast in our garden. We always maintain the house gardens – the area of close to two acres on the flat around the house which includes the summer gardens, the rockery, the Rimu Walk and the Avenue Gardens – to a weed-free, tidy state with areas that are quite sharply defined. The switch to the loose style of the park and the Wild North is very different and it is that contrast that makes it appear by design, not laissez faire management.

There is a lesson there that can be applied to those gardening on a smaller scale. The juxtaposition of some formality and form with more naturalistic, wilder plantings can pull it all together. It is what Dan Pearson does really well, if you scroll through to the photos of the garden he designed and planted at Little Dartmouth Farm. You can start small. We have experimented with letting our front lawn grow and flower over summer but giving it form by mowing a double width around the edge and paths on our main walking tracks across the lawn. It is not an option if your priority is an immaculate monoculture of a lawn that resembles a green velvet sward but we long ago abandoned that approach as a crime against nature.
I would suggest that if you are starting this particular journey and struggling to reconcile it with the traditional values of tidiness and visibly tight maintenance, you may find it easier if you keep the gardens closest to the house in a controlled, tidy state but start loosening that iron grip as you move further away. It creates a transition that seems to make sense to the logical parts of our brains.
It is fine to start small; it is recognising the need to change many of the ways we garden that is the very first step. Clare Foster’s book promises to show just how successful it can be to take a much more expansive view and to integrate concerns about sustainability, biodiversity and the longer term environment alongside placing a high value on aesthetics.
When I have written about working with Nature rather than gardening by controlling Nature, about gardens that sit within the landscape rather than on the land, about gardens that are immersive and not just pictorial, I think they are just variations on the topic that Clare Foster has grouped under her term of pastoral gardens. It is the same ground that I traversed with Australian gardener, Michael McCoy and it comes through repeatedly in his social media posts.
No matter the words and terms we use, I think we are all singing from the same song sheet and it is reassuring to find that the directions we have chosen in our little corner of Tikorangi are part of a wider international trend of questioning how we garden, what we value and how we can garden more positively to support an environment that gets more degraded and threatened every day.

For New Zealand readers: I went to order the book on line but blenched when it was going to cost as much for postage as the book. I can cope with £55 for the book but £54.95 for postage was an additional cost I will need to ponder further.

Thank you so much for that detailed and useful explanation. It was very helpful and also encouraging
cheers jenny
Thank you for saying so. Sometimes I feel I post these things and they disappear into space.
Yes I know the feeleing, but I read everything you write, I love that you aren’t afraid to be honest about stuff. Also you have so much knowledge going back a long time…. old gardens take careful management I am finding out :-)
Indeed, older gardens need a different skill set to starting a new garden. Too few gardens are ever allowed to develop to maturity.
Thank you for this. I was shocked when I discovered this book isn’t available in America. Shipping cost is a bit less here than yours is, but your stimulating post kicked me into action. Now Pastoral Gardens is on its way to me. I’ve only paid more for a used copy of Richard Hansen’s Perennials and their Garden Habitats.
I’m happy you keep up with your blog. I always look forward to reading it.
It is self published which means it is not being freighted out in quantity but mailed individually. I am not sure I need it $NZ245 worth! The only time we have have paid more for a book was one of botanical paintings of magnolias with a text writted by magnolia expert and personal friend, Jim Gardiner and it had several pages on our Jury magnolias. Pastoral Gardens isn’t quite in that league for us.
Thanks for your kind comments on my blog – I regard that praise as an honour. There are times when I wonder whether I want to continue with it, when I wonder if I have run out of things to say but I regard it as good discipline for me to continue. I met somebody yesterday who said how much she missed my weekly garden advice column in the local newspaper and that stopped 14 years ago! It was flattering to be remembered as having given helpful guides and advice so long after the event.
A very thought-provoking two blog posts Abbie. Like others, we love reading your posts and viewing the photos of your garden as it develops, especially as we have visited it three times in the past. Wildside is one garden that we would certainly want to visit, though I doubt we will ever travel to England. I’ve never ascribed labels such as sustainable or bio-diverse to our own garden, but I think this is how we garden and how we have been developing our own garden over 34 years so far. There is a bit too much biodiversity in terms of aphids and not enough in their natural predators to my mind, but I keep increasing the amount and variety of flowers in and around the vegetable gardens and inside the greenhouses each year, so hopefully one day I’ll get it working in my favour.
I’ve noted the publication of this book but have not ordered it and probably won’t. It is very expensive and doesn’t strike me as worth the money to read further of this discussion on gardening. I take intense issue with the regularly trotted out assertion that there is a need to increase the biodiversity of our gardens. From my own garden viewpoint, a traditional country garden, a very ordinary garden, old-style selection of trees, shrubs, perennials, bulbs etc etc, I contend that it is my garden and the plants in my garden which provide the biodiversity. All these exotic plants are the biodiversity, the addition to the range of plants in my locality, the extra and diverse providers of food for pollinators in my area. Bringing native plants – generally regarded as weeds in a garden setting – would only be mimicking what is growing all around me on road verges, field headlands and uncultivated land. Having the same wild plants in my garden would only repeat what was growing immediately outside the fence. The biodiversity is within! Great Dixter had a study done on biodiversity there – and examination of woodland, farmland, meadows, lakes etc etc and the area of greatest biodiversity was in the ornamental garden! A move away from the use of chemicals will lead lawns of lesser monoculture – native plants will surely make their way there – and will lead to a less pristine appearance in the garden. Perhaps, this leads to a more naturalistic appearance in the garden, a less formal look, a softer hand on matters. It is hardly a major new movement in gardening; hardly a genius moment; hardly a great revelation; hardly enough to warrant a book on the subject but paper never refused ink, I suppose, and where there’s a bob to be made…
Preaching to the converted, Paddy! This is not a book for you. If you think back to ghastly minimalist gardens of the turn of the most recent century – 3 boulders, 4 yuccas and a sanseveria marooned in white limestone chip (maybe you didn’t get this *upmarket* travesty of landscaping?) I think it is a discussion worth having across many aspects of gardening. We never prized immaculate lawns before the invention of the lawnmower but now that value – taken from American suburbia – still prevails across many gardens whose owners will be out spraying and fertilising their lawns on a regular basis. Whether this book addresses those fundamental attitudes and values often placed on ‘good’ gardens or whether it is more a showcase of a few gardens and garden designers will remain a mystery to me as to you. I don’t think I need to spend over $NZ240 to find out.
Thankyou Abbie & all you passionate garden bloggers here. I always love your way with words & all the info you share with us. Thankfully my small garden is hidden from passers-by so sometimes I let it go until I get another burst of energy & find some surprises as l start clearing the weeds & grasses. Have noticed lately that the birds like it. Wonder what category that would be? PS – I also very seldom spray.