Alison Levey of http://www.blackberrygarden.co.uk is an obsessive gardener based in Leicester and like our very own Mr McGregor would never describe herself as a professional, although we would certainly always take her advice on board. Through this article Alison tells us why she is growing a fondness for shrubbery.
I find the more I garden the more my taste in plants and planting evolves. Now it might not be improving in some people’s view, but I sense changes and start to like plants I have dismissed previously. Shrubs were not high on my list of plants to buy when I moved into my current house a few years ago, in fact I removed quite a few that I believed then to be in the wrong place. Thankfully I still think that and I have not planted any back where they were removed from. I was lucky in that the back garden in particular was pretty much a blank canvas, little more than a slightly shaped field, which excited me hugely at the thought of the possibilities.
The design of the garden has also been an evolving progression than a mapped out drawing. Some areas have had more formal planning than others and some areas, like the Wild Garden, have developed over time from the messages the garden itself gave to me. This might sound a little odd so let me explain further.
So what has all this to do with shrubs? As time has gone on I added the odd shrub or small tree, a viburnum here, a hamamelis there and a hydrangea or two. After a while I realised I had planted quite a few shrubs as an Edgeworthia was added and a clethra and a rhododendron or three. These are all still relatively small at the moment but they are changing the character of the wild garden and attracting even more wildlife into the area. I think the garden is now at its full quota of trees, there are limits to what will fit in and I think this led to a re-interest in shrubs as I see them as useful underplanting and a way of getting even more Spring and Autumn interest in particular into the garden.
I am very fond of my accidental shrubbery, I had no idea that one shrub leads to another, but it turns out they do.