The Field – August 2019

(Marcin) #1

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Founded in 1673, Chelsea Physic Garden is one of
the oldest botanic gardens in the UK


I


n Brideshead Revisited,
Sebastian Flyte enjoins
Charles Ryder to come
with him to the Oxford
University Botanic Gar-
dens “to see the ivy”


  • saying he doesn’t know where he’d be
    without the country’s oldest horticultural
    resource. While few of us would be plunged
    into such an existential crisis without regular
    access to a botanic garden, it’s tremendously
    easy to be beguiled by them – and with good
    reason: it would seem that they’re actively
    good for us, as well as being at the cutting
    edge of scientific research.
    There are roughly 60 botanical gardens in
    Britain today. Oxford is the oldest, opening
    in 1621, closely followed by the enchanting
    four-acre Chelsea Physic Garden in 1673.
    Many, though by no means all, are in urban
    settings, offering visitors a moment of calm
    in a green oasis. They vary hugely in terms
    of shape and size and design, but although
    each is different in many ways most have
    a common purpose. These are beautiful
    places: “One feels uplifted about the world
    around them,” explains Richard Barley,
    director of horticulture, learning and opera-
    tions at the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew,
    a 362-acre site that welcomed just shy of
    two million visitors last year. They have an
    almost ineffable, magical appeal.
    Dan Clayton Jones, the former president
    of the local branch of the Welsh Historic
    Gardens Trust, was responsible for the
    establishment of Cowbridge Physic Garden.
    He enthuses about these “enclosed spaces,
    set aside from the outside world” and “the
    huge appeal of having a walled garden, in
    particular: you walk through a door into a
    different world, one which contains the idea
    of a secret garden”. Cowbridge is relatively
    new, having been established in 2004 and
    opened in 2008 by the Duchess of Corn-
    wall. It had a specific brief: there would be
    no plants that weren’t already here in 1800 –
    the heyday of physic gardens. It had 150,000
    visitors last year, a reflection of how much
    the local community appreciates it.
    This may seem a purely recreational
    activity for many visitors. And that’s just fine,
    according to the directors and managers of
    the gardens. For while we’re strolling round,
    admiring the odd Platycerium bifurcatum or
    Magnolia grandiflora, we’re actually embrac-
    ing the zeitgeist for taking care of our mental
    health – the psychological and sociological
    benefits of time spent in botanical gardens
    are seemingly endless. Simon Hiscock,
    director of the Oxford Botanic Garden,

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