Garden Design

How to create carpets of colour, Cluny House Garde…

How to create carpets of colour, Cluny House Garde…


One sunny afternoon in late-April, while working on a remote landscape design in Scotland, I took the opportunity to pop into Cluny House Garden in Perthshire. What I discovered is nothing short of remarkable.

16703698 1dc7 42aa aef0 0a9dd97b4cf8 1 105 c
Erythronium revolutum, Primula elatior and Anemone nemorosa create a sparkling flow around Narcissus that have finished flowering

A private hillside garden open to the public, Cluny is a heavily sloped and densely shaded woodland garden where seedlings are encouraged to grow in paths and visitors to tip-toe gently around them for wildlife. While some would balk at the prospect of shade and challenging slopes, owners Wendy and John have cleverly turned to plants that will gradually spread in these conditions.

df7f7a3a 7b72 4795 aec5 d5ad5bddb8df 1 105 c
Primula denticulata
7f6b90cc 02b4 49d0 af5c a30eee50b991 1 105 c
Matteuccia struthiopteris

The garden is organic, it uses no pesticides at all, no weedkillers – everything is hand weeded – and peat free compost is used for propagation. Plants are encouraged to spread, though kept within the bounds of the garden, which also has an impressive list of wildflowers including a large bluebell wood.

d8cabe3b c902 4b94 a063 23f1328dec46 1 105 c
A sea of Erythronium revolutum mixed with Hellebores

Cluny House Garden was established in the 1950s by Bobby and Betty Masterton who had an interest in Himalayan plants because their natural habitat matches that of this hillside plot just beneath the Cairngorm National Park in Scotland. It is now looked after by Bobby and Betty’s daughter Wendy and her husband, John Mattingley.

2cda3491 e874 4607 be53 575c4b1a85a7 1 105 c

Wendy’s parents planted up what was originally an empty plot with lots of trees and shrubs, often grown from seed, including beautiful Acer and Prunus found throughout the garden. There are also two enormous Sequoiadendron giganteum, with the largest girth I have seen outside of California.

9ed4b649 ad67 4564 9c7b ba30d8ace350 1 105 c 1

I love the way spreading plants fill huge areas of shade, mingling with wildflowers. Because they are low, they create a wonderful feeling of openness allowing visitors to appreciate the vast carpets of colour. The vastness of the low blanketing flowers at this time of year may not be entirely clear from my photos, they cover almost all areas of the garden.

191df049 2129 4394 b0d9 2a1ef672104a 1 105 c

Cluny House Gardens make extensive use of dead wood, fallen leaves and plant material for making various habitats and usable homemade compost. When I arrived at the end of the day, John was potting up seedlings by the house while Wendy traversed the steep slopes removing weeds to take to the compost piles.

368ed791 4d7d 4bb5 82c9 cc0db9f9af05 1 105 c
Fallen trees are kept
39889da0 dfec 46c0 b8ff de36aecec78e 1 105 c 1
Filtered sunlight on mossy paths

Fallen trees are left to rot down naturally, creating natural habitats for fungi, bacteria and insects.

cdc5ddc0 1124 45a7 ad0e cf73a58dd06e 1 105 c
Primula elatior growing around other woodland plants.

Overall the feeling is one of a very natural and magical woodland. There are bare patches of soil as you’d expect in a woodland, useful for wildlife that need it, and in other areas the spreading plants close like a tide, creating dense matts of colour and texture.

87ce4b4a 237f 4234 82eb 704110cabb4d 1 105 c
Trillium albidum
a5bb8136 d0bd 41f4 ad97 5ffa8d49ba7d 1 105 c
Trillium spp.

Chris and I saw trilliums wild in Canada last year, and Cluny House Gardens has many in different colours through different areas, reminding me of that trip. I particularly liked the darkest reds and the bright white ones above.

eebe3664 61f0 4e82 882b 50180b24eebe 1 105 c
Lysichiton camtschatcensis

Lysichiton camtschatcensis, the white skunk cabbage from Asia, is much slower to spread than its American cousin, Lysichiton americanus, and isn’t a problem. You can’t help but be drawn in the by the pure white of the spathes.

fb43f89e 67f4 4171 81c9 3984745a8642 1 105 c
Erythronium revolutum
98ca66ca d1a2 4e31 a8d6 cc9ca37c0ee6 1 102 o
Anemone nemorosa

I guess I found the garden exciting not only because of the sheer impact of the volume of ground covers, – the best use I’ve seen of low flowering plants – but because the next wave of plants were coming through too, revealing the layers of interesting plants to see across the year. Giant Himalayan lilies and Martagon lilies could be seen shooting all over the garden, blue Meconopsis poppies too, all no doubt remarkable later in spring.

1a19c0ff da98 4bf1 acb3 333ae130609d 1 105 c
Mass planting of Erythronium revolutum
ea5bbc56 25a2 4ee4 8e7c 87c5acf6801a 1 105 c
Solitary Erythronium revolutum
f8885c5c abbe 464d 8a90 f56669e6961f 1 105 c
A Hosta emerging from within Dicentra spp.
68ec1338 21ec 4689 a214 e071bc3273f3 1 201 a

Sciurus vulgaris, the red squirrel, evolved in Western Europe but is now threatened in the UK because of grey squirrels introduced by Victorians, which spread deadly diseases that the red squirrel has no immunity to. Cluny House Gardens cares for a number of red squirrels that live among its exotic trees.

bfef48c4 1b8c 4da8 9623 1ad3d42bad4f 1 105 c
Dropping bittercress, Cardamine enneaphyllos, forming lush clumps of foliage and lilac flowers in the middle.
39a3db2a a4f6 4bc6 81f5 4eeff69349c7 1 105 c
Bright yellow saxifrage
b49fb2dc 5667 4203 b580 722a3c418459 1 105 c

If you look closely in the above picture among the Erythronium and Anemone, there are the emerging tufts of Martagon lilies. John told me that this area began simply by throwing seeds collected from their existing plants into a damaged lawn.

I hope I can revisit again later this year to see how the garden has changed, Cluny House Gardens is one of the most unique gardens I’ve visited and deeply thought provoking, exciting because of it.

Cluny House Gardens is open every day from 9am – 6pm. Site: clunyhousegardens.com

Join my newsletter to follow my exploration of northern gardens and other musings



Source link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *