What do you think is the rarest thing in your garden? A special snowdrop? A mature pockethandkerchief tree? Neither, I reckon. It's clear to me that the rarest thing in any garden is... silence. It appears to be the one commodity that money can't buy.
A stately home close to us came up for sale a few years ago. A wealthy billionaire arrived in his helicopter to take a look. He landed it on the lawn beside the impressive Palladian-fronted property-all pillars and pilasters, dating from the 18th century, and surrounded by several hundred acres of farmland and woodland. He switched off his helicopter engines, disembarked the craft and listened. He could hear the not-too-distant hum of the M3. He boarded his helicopter and took off, never to return.
I was reminded of this tale in the summer when I was asked to suggest an acceptable 'start' and 'stop' time for powered garden machinery on a Sunday. I worried that I would sound holier-than-thou when I explained that I never use power tools on a Sunday, believing profoundly that there should be at least one day in the week when we could go out into our gardens and experience a bit of peace and quiet - or at least as near to peace and quiet as it's possible to experience in this jet-powered age.
Esta historia es de la edición October 2023 de BBC Gardeners World.
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Esta historia es de la edición October 2023 de BBC Gardeners World.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 8500 revistas y periódicos.
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We love June
We're cruising towards midsummer: this is a month full of love and abundance. Wherever you look there will be something in your garden that lifts the spirits and makes you glad to be alive. We have colour to cheer us, we have leaves that still have the bounce and freshness of small puppies, we have the first berries fattening up, there are birds frantically parenting very demanding broods of chicks, the bees are all over the place, it's prime barbecue and picnic season, and we have lawns as lush and green as billiard tables. What a month to fall in love.
Your wildlife month
The female will usually lay one clutch of up to eight eggs
An edible garden in pots
Join Lucy Bellamy in creating an edible container garden for all seasons, as she harvests what's ripe now and starts later-season crops
Garden craft with kids
Fill the summer holidays with fun nature makes for kids, including botanical printed t-shirts, seed sowing in upcycled food containers and a hanging home for beneficial insects. Jaime Johnson and family show you how
Secrets of a COLOURFUL GARDEN
Using a colour theme is an easy way to give any garden a strong, unified character - Nick Bailey shows you how
Indoor plants, outdoor treats
Break the rules and give your house plants a summer holiday, with Michael Perry's mixed pot display ideas
YOUR PRUNING MONTH
The first few weeks of summer are a good time to get spring-flowering plants in shape. Follow Frances' guide for best results
Gardening for wellbeing
As the pressures of modern living bear down, our outside spaces can provide soothing respite for our minds and bodies, says Arit Anderson
Your greenhouse guide to A fruitful summer
Get the best from your greenhouse fruit and vegetable crops this summer, with these tried and trusted growing tips from Adam Frost
Stars of the show
Agapanthus is the perfect midsummer plant, flowering with spectacular blooms from June onwards and, as Monty explains, it loves to grow in a pot