The Walled Garden at Flintham Hall

I was pleased to learn that nearby Flintham Hall was opening for charity as part of the National Garden Scheme, and that I’d get a chance to have a look at another part of the estate’s garden. We’d visited in April for the Bluebell walk and that was amazing, so my expectations were high.

I was not disappointed.

I mean, what an enticing entrance.

An enticing view through the gate to the garden

And after turning the corner and spending quite a bit of time admiring the flowering wisteria, as well as the alliums and tulips planted beneath it, and the plentiful hawthorn blossom we headed through the wrought iron gate into the walled garden.

In flower wisteria covering the entrance to the walled garden
The wisteria is underplanted with flowering alliums  - looks great
Closer look at the alliums and some lilac 'frilly ' tulips
Pink edged hawthorn blossom

My first view of the walled garden was pretty special too.

The first look inside the walled garden looking along the long border
peonies fit to burst - cerise and gorgeous

We followed the path that led to the glasshouse, past many bushes of peonies whose buds looked ready to pop. In the glasshouse - which was also to die for - was this pastel blush coloured flowering amaryllis.

A pale peach amaryllis in the glasshouse

What a glorious space.

A glasshouse to be envious of - with a fig, vine and plenty of potted geraniums

I finally left the glasshouse, which had a swimming pool at one end, to discover a non-native animal eyeing up the waterlilies in the pond, or maybe something else?

is that an alligator or crocodile by the pond?

Next we headed towards an area with fruit trees which were clearly old - and shaped into a fantastic goblet. It looks, like me, that the estate will be expecting a fair few apples later in the year too.

An apple tree on the lawn
apples starting to form on the branches

Though their roses (and peonies) are way ahead of mine, but like the peonies before I was happy to stop and admire the blooms.

A gloriously pink rose in full flower

This was our exit from the walled garden, and passing another gnarly and twisted wisteria which to me the trunk of it looks like the face of an animal (if you look closely enough!) and the exit was just as thought out as either of the gates I showed at the start of this post, but I wasn’t prepared for what came next.

An old and twisty/gnarly wisteria trunk by the gate out and alongside an urn like statue
frothy cow parsley in the outer garden with a mown path - looking dreamy

How beautiful, dreamy and enticing is this mown path through the cow parsley? I think I want to move in…

Post Comment Love 22 - 25 May

Hello there, welcome to this week’s #PoCoLo - a relaxed, friendly linky which I co-host with Suzanne, where you can link any blog post published in the last week. We know you’ll find some great posts to read, and maybe some new-to-you blogs too, so do pop over and visit some of the posts linked, comment and share some of that love.

It’s another bank holiday weekend here in the UK, so the linky will stay open until Monday evening so there’s more time to link up - and if the weather forecast is correct, it’s going to be a scorcher.

Please don’t link up posts which are older as they will be removed, and if you see older posts are linked then please don’t feel that it’s necessary to comment on those. If you were here last week it was great to have you along, if you’re new here we’re pleased you’ve joined us.

There’s been a lot more gardening, and with MOH on what he’s calling ‘light duties’ the grass cutting has fallen to me. It’s been a long time since I last cut the grass, in fact it was before MOH and I got together. But I have now cut the grass twice and apparently I’ve passed my ‘beginner’s grass cutting’ qualification. I think this meant that I was allowed to progress to strimming the edges, though had I known then maybe I’d have failed on purpose!

So it seems appropriate for my picture this week to be our garden wheelie bin full of mostly grass, and approximately the third that isn’t grass is weeds that were growing in the grass and needed to be weeded out before any grass cutting could take place.

Have a great week, and don’t forget the sunscreen.

A very full garden wheelie bin - mostly grass cuttings, but about a third of it is weeds

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The Head Gardener's Office at Scampston

Not only where we able to look around the Gardeners Yard at Scampston Hall, we also got to look ino the Head Gardener’s Office - and while it was set up more as an exhibit rather than a working office, it was still a delight to see.

We made our way in through the Conservatory which was built by Richardson of Darlington in 1894 and restored in 2015 with help from the Heritage Lottery Fund amongst others and now housing a series of exhibition rooms, displays and with a space for community engagement too.

Blue flowers of the plumbago climbing the peach coloured wall in the conservatory

The blue flowered plumbago clambering up the peach wall inside the conservatory definitely drew me in, but turning around the view was just as spectacular and I can see how important it was for the garden to restore the glasshouse to its former glory.

Looking back out of the conservatory towards the fountain with the geraniums in an arc at the bottom of the picture
Looking out of the conservatory to the central fountain in the garden (and a cloudy sky!)

If only all conservatories had this view!

Turning further into the building we found the Head Gardener’s Office, and wouldn’t it just be a dream to manage and plan the garden from here - and I’d especially like that wooden drawer unit to organise my own garden plans.

Shelving and storage in the Head Gardener's Office with plenty of garden paraphernalia
The open shelves with a wooden bureau in the Head Gardener's Office at Scampston Hall

And while this is a great place for drying onions, garlic and seed heads I think this would be hard to replicate in my own garden setup, and actually I never seem to have much luck with onions anyway, so that’s probably just as well.

The log burner adorned with onions, garlic and seed heads drying

But I did see some inspiration on how I could pot up some succulents, isn’t it darling?

A succulent in a tea cup

Of course I left with some seeds of my own - and actually this post is a great reminder for me to look them out and actually do something with them. I saw some Agastache in the garden centre earlier this week, and I thought it sounded familiar but I couldn’t remember why. Here’s why!

Packets of seeds for sale in the Head Gardener's Office

And finally one connection in history that I learnt as we read the interesting information boards around the space. The glasshouse was originally made by Richardson of Darlington, which went on to become one of the glasshouse companies in the Victorian era. It was also the only company to last into this century, rebranding in the 1960s as Amdega. That company finally closed in 2011, but the liquidators sold the brand to Everest the double glazing company, and so the brand lives on with heritage at its heart. I love discovering things like that.

Now I’m off to look out those seeds…