We are thrilled to announce that the Snow Cup, the annual flower arranging competition open to local horticultural societies which was hosted by Headley at their Autumn Show on Saturday, was won by Grayshott Gardeners, with Telford in second place and Headley coming third. It is the first time GG have won since 1995! Well done to Gill Purkiss for her imagination, ability to be creative and for arranging everything so well, with help from Suzi Gordon.
Grayshott Gardeners chalked up another triumph with Saturday’s Summer Show 2018. Despite the dry and hottest June for many years, there were masses of colourful plant and flower displays and mouth-watering fruit and vegetable exhibits. The Floral Arrangements were especially spectacular and admired by the many visitors to the Show, who had foregone Wimbledon and England’s bid for the World Cup in order not to miss this annual highlight put on by Grayshott Gardeners’ Show Team and the members who entered one or more of the 229 items in 76 different classes. The Juniors comprised a particularly strong contingent with their dwarf French Beans grown in jam jars (Open Classes), which augurs well for the future of Grayshott Gardeners.
Having enjoyed the sumptuous display, including entries for the Close Brooks Cup which Grayshott hosted this year and was won by Tilford with their box of beautifully displayed vegetables, visitors welcomed a cup of tea and a home-made cake served by the Catering Team, only to be waylaid by Karen and the Plant Sales Team with a tempting offering of plants. Free entertainment was also provided by Karen who had inadvertently given a lift to some juvenile frogs who played hide and seek in the tea room! Home-grown and very tasty cucumbers proved an additional attraction.
A list of this year’s Summer Show Trophy winners is provided here , and on the Shows page. PHOTO GALLERY (photos by John Price) on the photo gallery page or here
The destination for our May visit, Ramster Garden near Chiddingfold, kept open especially for our early evening visit, proved a delight to walk around, with its many areas and vistas, nearly always against a background of different coloured rhododendrons and azaleas.
Carved from Douglas Fir, using hacksaw only
Bird’s eye view
The Japanese influence was evident from the bamboo clumps, the snowball hydrangea and the (very) prickly castor oil tree, the cranes sculpture in the ponds, and the Japanese Bridge, and was a speciality of Gauntletts, the nurseries who designed the original garden for Sir Henry Waechter in 1900.
Although quite compact, the different sections, including wild flower areas with numerous spotted orchids, the ponds, the bog garden with its spectacular flowering guneras and the (steep) woodland walk gave the impression of a much larger garden.
Giant Gunnera in flower
Snowball Hydrangea
The photo gallery on the Ramster website, www.ramsterevents.com is well worth viewing. The garden is open to the public in Spring (until 10th June) and Autumn only, with a Tea House and Plant Sales near the entrance.
This annual event proved again a resounding success, thanks to the many members who grew, potted on and then helped arrange, price and sell the countless plants on display, all skillfully and efficiently directed by our Chair, Karen Flood. The Grayshott Plant Sale has a reputation for low-priced quality plants, and there was no shortage of customers, many who arrived with baskets and out-sized carriers, and left delighted with their haul. The catering team under Sue Debenham was on hand to revive anyone in need of a sit down and refreshments whilst considering where to plant their purchases.
Treasurer Dennis Homer was well satisfied with the fundraising result, as was Programme Officer Terry Boorman, who will no doubt continue to arrange for the very best speakers at our Club Night Lectures.
Committee Member John Price has been busy taking many photographs, which are displayed on the photo gallery page.
The Grayshott Gardeners Spring Show on Saturday proved a huge success with 234 exhibits, and 138 gardening fans (74 members and 64 visitors) despite the preceding cold weather. A full report, including a results list, is published on the Shows pages, and a selection of photographs taken by committee member John Price can be seen on the photo gallery page. Also on the committee is Helen Deighan, who has submitted a report and photographs to the Haslemere Herald, the Messenger and the Surrey and Hants News.
You will find a link to the Summer Show Schedule on the Shows page. This Schedule will be shown in full on the Shows page in good time, so there will be no excuse not to start planning and preparing now for the Summer Show on 7th July!
Karen Flood and her many helpers are busy collecting together a fresh supply of quality and unusual plants for the Annual Plant Sale on 5th May, when eager customers will be queueing up to be first through the doors at 10 am.
The Minutes of the AGM held in November are now available on the Committee page. They record the President’s and Treasurer’s Reports for the past year, recognition for distinguished services, the RHS Bronze Medal award and changes in the committee, including Rosario Henshall who will be taking on the duties of Hon. Secretary from Suzi in January.
The New 2018 Handbook and membership cards will be available at our next Club Night Lecture on 10th January.
The season of shows and open gardens may be over, but there is still plenty to delight, surprise and share in our members’ gardens: autumn colour, a late flowering bloom; the beauty of sculptural plants, or seedpods; and wildlife visitors, invited or trespassing.
The photo gallery has been set up for you to share with (or show off to!) other members any aspect of your garden you particularly delight in or find interesting; conversely, it offers a glimpse of members’ gardens you might otherwise not have the opportunity to see.
You don’t need perfect photography skills or expensive equipment: just keep a camera or mobile phone handy and take a picture when something piques your interest, then email it to info@grayshottgardeners.net including your own name and perhaps a brief caption (e.g. name of plant).
Grayshott Gardeners secured second place in the Intervillage Competition, the Close Brooks Cup, on Saturday 9th September in Elstead.
Many thanks to Gill Purkiss for co-ordinating our entry and the members who contributed the plant, flowers, vegetables and fruit. Next year Grayshott will be hosting the competition in Grayshott.
Thursday 3rd August 2017 will be forever etched in my mind, along with my wedding day and birth of my children. This was the Day that Carol Klein and a BBC film crew came to my garden to film for Gardeners World. !!!!
Carol, Jill and Jessie
It had long been a lifetimes dream of mine to have my garden on my favourite TV programme but I never in a million years thought it would ever come true!.
I had seen on Facebook a few months ago that GW were looking for real peoples gardens to film as recent audience research had shown viewers were fed up with watching Monty Don dig holes and plant plants.!! Also they only show large gardens owned by rich people!!! They were also interested in normal people who had a back story, so I wrote telling them about my ‘dodgy eyes’ and my messy border!
I had forgotten all about it and one day received an e mail from one of the producers asking if I was still interested. I wrote back saying I was and she arranged for one of her colleagues, Camilla to ring me to discuss it. Camilla duly rang and I told her all about myself and my garden. Camilla had to then report back to her bosses, more e mails followed and they requested photographs which I sent. I then had a tense few days while they decided whether to use me, they had had over 1100 applications. By then Camilla and I were communicating via text and I suddenly had a text to say, yes they would love to come and film with me, and could they come in eight days’ time! We then began the biggest clean-up of the house and garden we had ever seen. There is nothing like a BBC film crew coming to make you dust your corners! I am sure that many of my fellow gardeners, like me, tend to ignore housework in the summer months!
Film Crew
The crew all stayed in Old Thorns Hotel in Liphook and asked if they could come on the Wednesday night to see the garden and discuss what would happen the next day. We all sat very nervously waiting for them to arrive and finally the car pulled into the driveway. Camilla got out first and greeted me like an old friend, next was Steve the director and then Carol Klein herself was walking towards me smiling…. I manged to hold myself together and she shook my hand and said ‘just treat me as a friend visiting, I’m very informal’
This was easier said than done and it was very surreal having her sit in my sitting room, drinking tea and laughing. It was decided they would turn up the next morning at 8.30 and we discussed the format the day would take. I had previously offered to make them lunch which they were very pleased about as they normally get a sandwich from a local garage or supermarket. As it was the BBC and paid for by the licence fee they could not be seen to get anything for free so had to pay me £20, I tried to say no but they insisted and had to give me a receipt, I gave the money to the children!!! I had made a monster Victoria Sandwich which I am sure would have won first prize in one of our shows! Something made me think, is Carol Klein vegetarian? So I googled it and she was, so I did rolls, ham, salad and quiche with vegetarian couscous etc.
Carol wanted a quick look round the garden as it was getting dark, unfortunately it was raining so we got her an umbrella, in the garden she linked arms with me and I gave her a guided tour. She was very direct and kept telling me off for agreeing with her, ‘argue with me’ she kept saying, once I got used to doing this we had some really good ‘discussions’ about plants she liked and I didn’t and vice versa. We went into the greenhouse and Camilla came too, she is a horticulturalist as well as a producer. I don’t like Begonias and had one shoved in a corner, Carol asked me ‘why is that begonia in the naughty corner’!! I had got it free with a plant order and didn’t have the heart to throw it away. I showed them some succulents I had bought from Tom Hart Dyke when he came to give a talk to the club and Camilla said, ‘he’s my boyfriend!!!’ I can remember when Tom had finished his talk and answered questions that one of our members asked if he had a girlfriend!! What a small world!
All too soon we were waving them off and wondering what had just happened was a dream!!
The next morning we were up early, my husband was not too keen on being filmed and disappeared to work early. The children, who many of you have met, loved the day, and were fascinated about how a TV programme is filmed.
Joining us on the Thursday were Gary the cameraman and Sam the sound man. The microphone goes down inside your clothes and connects on the back of your trousers, just like you see on TV. Sam told me to tell him if I needed the toilet as if you pull your trousers down with the pack attached it can fall down the toilet and it was very expensive, it took some getting used to, to tell a male stranger every time I needed to powder my nose I can tell you!
The director was very good and told me to just ignore the camera and look at Carol, they would get the angles right, every conversation had to be repeated three or four times with different camera angles each time. I found that I say ‘Yes’ a lot and found it difficult to wait for Carol to stop talking before I started, but got the hang of it. They all worked very hard and we filmed for 11 hours with just stops for eating and drinking.
In the kitchen
Carol really mucked in – above a photo of her washing up in the kitchen. She also made a fuss of the children, playing football and planting seeds with them. The film crew were very friendly and had a good sense of humour and at the end of the day I felt sad I would probably never see them again.
We filmed many more scenes than were shown on GW, enough to make a whole programme, but they must have ended up on the cutting room floor!
During the day Camilla kept her handbag clutched to her and a couple of times I had asked if she wanted to put it in the house but she had said no, I had thought it a bit strange until I noticed that every so often Gary the cameraman would take a full ‘chip’ from the camera and she would put it into a special wallet then put it in her bag. I think she did not want the bag to go out of her sight or all our work might have been lost!
All too soon all the filming they needed had been done and they were keen to get on the road for a 2 hour drive to their next hotel for their next job. They had chosen myself and one other person out of the 1100 who had applied and it was the next persons turn the following day. After that the camera and sound men were off to film Antiques Roadshow. They are all self-employed and seemed to work seven days a week.
It was a very special day, one I will never forget and a dream come true, only thing is I don’t know what to have for my lifetimes dream now, I’m not really an Everest climbing type of person!
Redesigned border
I hope those of you who watched it enjoyed it and anyone who wants to come and see the border and the garden, you are more than welcome!
(Available for viewing on the BBC’s iPlayer until mid-September; Carol Klein features about 45 minutes into the programme )
There are 45 notable pink colours listed on Wikipedia, a number easily surpassed on Wednesday. Pink balloons, pink flowers and tables decked out in pink awaited our members, who themselves had made a great effort to dress up in, you guessed it, pink – rose pink, salmon pink, hot pink, shocking pink (and that’s just the men). Pink bubbly added to the rosy glow which soon descended on the visitors, resulting in animated conversation which was interrupted only by the serving of salad with chicken and pink-hued ham. The challenging quiz set for the interval turned a few members puce, but was fairly won by the pink table, and the person in the pinkest attire was Anne Noyce.
Click to enlarge
Click to enlarge
One question remains unanswered: who is sitting on those fifty pink balloons, last seen stuffed in a king size pink duvet cover?