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The summit of achievement
Country Life UK
|September 11, 2024
The garden at Friar Park, Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire The home of Olivia and the late George Harrison

The 'Gardening Beatle' did a spectacular job of reviving an historic alpine garden in the shadow of the 'Henley Matterhorn'. Now, his widow, Olivia, has enhanced what was Britain's largest rock garden with her exceptional and imaginative planting schemes, as Charles Quest-Ritson reports.
WHEN George Harrison bought Friar Park in January 1970, there was grass growing up through the floorboards. 'My God! What's he done?... look at it!' his sister in-law Irene exclaimed. As for the garden, she later observed that 'you didn't go for a walk without a machete in your hand to cut your way through'.
Few properties can have had so many advantages and disadvantages as this house on a hill above Henley-on-Thames in Oxfordshire. On the plus side, the former Beatle had found an estate of 30 acres, close to the town, but completely protected from it.

Harrison was 27 years old. His friend Derek Taylor remarked of Friar Park: 'It is a dream on a hill and it came, not by chance, to the right man at the right time.' Harrison had enjoyed gardening as a boy-planting and picking his own flowers-and, as an adult, plants appealed to his spiritual sensibilities.
He was particularly interested in trees and shrubs, visiting the Hillier Arboretum in Hampshire and the gardens of Cornwall.
This story is from the September 11, 2024 edition of Country Life UK.
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