Hollyhocks are giving a wonderful display in our streets and front gardens this year.
Their ability to grow in such tricky conditions never fails to astound and delight me.
On a recent trip to France in June (postings to follow soon on some amazing gardens visited) we stayed in a B&B in Chartres with Jean-Loup Cuisiniez (above) and his wife and met a kindred greener-up-of the-city. Jean-Loup has been strategically dropping Hollyhock seeds around Chartres and has a fair few plants growing in the car park,
and along his street. He’s promised to send me a pic when they’re all in flower. Jean-Loup is in discussions with the local council to make more paths public right of way to create easier walking routes throughout Chartres and he also wants to create walls of roses in the streets near the Cathedral.
I nodded sagely as he explained his aspsirations, but it wasn’t until we visited the Rose Festival in Chedigny, a village in the Loire near Loches, that I really understood what this could mean.
Every wall in the village was covered in these glorious climbers and ramblers,
with labels letting you know the variety. How bloomin’ marvelous.
The Rose Festival is the brainchild of Mayor Pierre Loualt who started the project in 1998, working with French rose specialist André Eve to plant over 700 roses in the village. The festival takes place over two days every year with specialist nurseries setting up stalls,
but you can happily wander through the village at other times to enjoy this marvelous rose extravaganza.
Both sight and scents were truly inspirational, and, although our North London manor doesn’t quite conjure up the bucolic bliss of the Loire, I’m wondering if we could start some similar rose planting in our streets in Finsbury Park?