Sunday, 19 June 2011
A toast to an old friend.........
Today would have been my cat Casper's 5th birthday. Sadly he was killed a few years' ago but today would have been his coming of age birthday. You see, Casper was no ordinary cat, he was a Maine Coon, one of the largest domestic cats you can get and they don't reach full maturity until they are about five years old, so the photos you see here are him as a baby! He was like no other cat I have ever known - more like a daft puppy, chasing after us down the street when we left for work, thundering up to us when we came home, chasing sticks, playing with water - the breed is often described as the clown of the cat world. He's the reason we know all our neighbours; we became known as the people with the big cat. When we were out at work he would visit everyone in the street - he even won over people who have never liked cats, inviting himself into their homes, greeting them as they pulled up in their cars, even getting in their cars. He was loved so much by so many that people would come to visit him (not us) and once when he had been ill, came and knocked on the door to ask after him. When he died we received cards, flowers, plants, heard stories of his adventures in their gardens and even had a neighbour crying on our doorstep. That's not the reaction you get over your run-of-the-mill moggy! People still talk of him fondly now. We'll always miss him and wonder how big he would have grown - he certainly would have weighed more than our 7 month old baby daughter! One day we may have another cat but they'll have some tough competition to be as great as Casper.
Friday, 3 June 2011
Blooming Chelsea
Chelsea Flower Show is over for another year. I was disappointed at the absence of one of my favourite designers Tom Stuart-Smith who has worked in collaboration with Laurent-Perrier at Chelsea for a number of years and who's gardens never fail to inspire me. His ethos is essentially all about the planting, keeping his work very naturalised and using the hard landscaping as a backbone to his gardens. I have been lucky enough to see his work with his revival of the Italian Gardens at Trentham Gardens and part of the gardens at Wisley. I grew up in Trentham and saw the decay of the gardens over many years; in 2005 Stuart-Smith breathed new life into them giving a contemporary twist to Charles Barry's formal Victorian gardens.
He may not have been at Chelsea this year but I am looking forward to visiting Stuart-Smith's current exhibition at the Garden Museum this summer.
So, who did impress me at Chelsea? I was pleased to see that plants remained the focus of the gardens this year, I'm not fond of gardens where the hard landscaping takes priority. Quite often the show gardens are just about that - showmanship - something that I don't identify with. For a designer such as Diarmuid Gavin it is all about the theatre - it may be inspirational but it's unattainable to the average man on the street; I prefer something quietly confident. It is the smaller artisan and urban gardens that I relate to. The Lands' End Across the Pond Garden by Adam Frost was my winner. In a 7m x 5m garden, he created an oasis of calm inspired by the work of architect Frank Lloyd Wright.
From an aesthetic point of view I have admired some of Lloyd Wright's work but was never aware of his philosophy, that being a strong visual connection between the interior and exterior spaces of a building so that the architecture harmonizes with nature. Frost has used this philosophy in his Chelsea garden using materials favoured by Frank Lloyd Wright such as polished concrete and water and using strong structural planting where the foliage is as important as the flowers. The concrete has strong visual impact but does not detract from the planting within the garden. For me the tight use of colour, presence of water and restrained structural elements reminded me of Tom Stuart-Smith's 2008 Chelsea Garden.
And now it's all over, it just leaves me frustrated - wanting to get into my own garden, inspired but not having the time to spend working on it. At least the sun is shining and the flowers are blooming so it may be unkempt but at least it's pretty.
He may not have been at Chelsea this year but I am looking forward to visiting Stuart-Smith's current exhibition at the Garden Museum this summer.
Stuart-Smith's perennial borders within the structure of Charles Barry's formal Italian gardens at Trentham
photograph courtesy of Tom Stuart-Smith
So, who did impress me at Chelsea? I was pleased to see that plants remained the focus of the gardens this year, I'm not fond of gardens where the hard landscaping takes priority. Quite often the show gardens are just about that - showmanship - something that I don't identify with. For a designer such as Diarmuid Gavin it is all about the theatre - it may be inspirational but it's unattainable to the average man on the street; I prefer something quietly confident. It is the smaller artisan and urban gardens that I relate to. The Lands' End Across the Pond Garden by Adam Frost was my winner. In a 7m x 5m garden, he created an oasis of calm inspired by the work of architect Frank Lloyd Wright.
The Lands' End Across the Pond Garden by Adam Frost
photograph courtesy of The RHS
And now it's all over, it just leaves me frustrated - wanting to get into my own garden, inspired but not having the time to spend working on it. At least the sun is shining and the flowers are blooming so it may be unkempt but at least it's pretty.
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