
Keith Brown -My gardening experience and history
As a boy growing up in the post
war years in rural Gloucestershire, from a very early age I fell in love with
plants and the countryside. My father, no natural gardener, grew vegetables
of necessity, and by the age of six I remember being given a patch in which
to grow my own. My first successes were with lettuces, radishes and strawberries.
That thrill of growing plants has never left me (Gertrude Jekyll once remarked
that “the
love of gardening is a seed that once sown never dies”) and now 50 years
on and in retirement I am even more passionate about plants an d gardening
and have substantially extended the range of plants I grow to encompass hardy
and tender plants, displayed in large colour themed borders within my one acre
plot - and of course my beloved vegetables!
I have never had any formal horticultural
training but have learned by practical hands on experience, making mistakes
and learning from them, reading copious books and magazines, joining plant
societies and taking every of opportunity of speaking to experienced gardeners
and nurserymen. Since 2000 with my partner Moira we have opened our garden
for charity under The National Gardens Scheme in which time we have raised
over £12,000. We have one main Open Day in
July details of which can be found in the current years “Yellow Book”.
We also open at other times from June until October for visits by garden clubs
and other parties and private individuals. I also regularly give talks to garden
clubs and societies. Further details of the garden will shortly be available
on line www.cilgwylodge.co.uk from February 2010.