Jo’s Monday walk : A lady and a folly

We’ve got our work cut out today, but I hope you’ll enjoy it.  We’re off to see a Northumberland garden with an Edwin Lutyens touch, but first I need to take you back in time.  It’s a warm, muggy day, totally unlike my last visit here when the biting winds cut through me and hailstones peppered my umbrella.

I was meeting a lovely lady, a poet and a craft worker whom I’d many times chatted to on the blog.  Though living in Brittany, Viv had a daughter in Northumberland and had suggested we might meet on one of her visits home.  Her choice of venue was Northumberlandia, at that time newly opened to the public.  In a particularly bitter March it wasn’t an inviting place, but the company was great and we valiantly struggled up the domes.

I wrote about that encounter with a smile on my face, little knowing that we’d never meet again.  In July 2016, Viv died suddenly, and my thoughts were full of her when I returned, to a much sunnier Northumberlandia, last week.

I hadn’t planned to visit, but the garden I had come to see belonged to the Blagdon Estate, who donated the land for this project.  The Ridley family have owned the estate since the 17th century, and Northumberlandia is in part an attempt to give back to the community some of the profits made through Shotton Surface Mine.  The story of the landscaping is a fascinating one, but now I’m going to leave the lady sleeping quietly and turn my attention to the magnificent gardens, just across the road.

You know you are amongst the landed gentry when the drive sweeps past a private cricket pavilion, with perfectly manicured lawn.  In the distance, russet coloured cows graze, the house sheltered from prying eyes by a stand of ancient trees.

Something entirely magical was about to happen.  Strolling beside the beech hedges which run the length of Lutyens’ canal, a rustling suggested a presence beyond the hedge.  Imagining the gardener not quite finished his chores in time for this Open Gardens event, I barely had time to register what was happening when out from the undergrowth burst a deer, in full flight mode.  With a graceful leap, he was beyond the canal and disappearing again into the woods.  I stood transfixed.

Nothing to do but continue into the formal garden, but I found it hard to concentrate.  My eyes were trained on the woods beyond, watching for movement.  Finally the walled garden distracted me.  Hard to ignore a couple of the beauties there.

But the fun was just beginning.  Behind a row of cottages, the Dene tumbles down to a stream.  Wild garlic carpets the banks and, following the tangled path through the undergrowth, your reward might just be a jewel burst or two of colour.

The path continues beneath the bridge, rounds a corner and there before you is a stately old viaduct.  A lovely fragrance surrounded me and I stopped to admire the vivid yellow blooms.  A gentleman asks do I know what they are and, with reasonable confidence, I declare them to be azaleas.  A lady disagrees, assuring us that these American rhododendrons are the only ones to have fragrance?  Jude is my expert.

Through a gate designed to keep out rabbits, the quarry lies in wait.  A sign declares that 6000 tons of stone were excavated in the 18th and 19th centuries to construct buildings on the estate.  I love the way it has been turned over to nature, with just the odd quirk or two.

The gardens were extensively remodelled in the 1930s by Sir Edwin Lutyens, whose daughter Ursula was married to Matthew White Ridley, the 3rd Viscount Ridley.  Some have stood the test of time, while other areas are a little unkempt.  It must be an enormous task, taming a 27 acre estate such as this.  One more treat in store, before we retire for that hard-earned cuppa in The Clockhouse .  A figure of eight walk takes you around the lake and across the stepping stones.  A chapel folly peeps through the trees, and in the distance a Grade II listed temple.

I hope you’ve enjoyed our walk this week, and I’m sorry if it was a little lengthy .  There are some extraordinary photos of Northumberlandia you might like on the Blagdon Estate website.

No walk from me for the next 2 weeks, because I shall be in Poland and then visiting my daughter in Nottingham.  I’ll try and keep up with you where I can.  Meantime I have lots of lovely walks for you to browse.  Many thanks to you all!

Lady Lee was very swift away this week :

Skywatch Kew Gardens

Melodie has some quite beautiful walks.  I’ve selected this one because I haven’t done it and I love coastal walks :

Hike Whitehaven to St. Bees, Cumbria, UK

Suzanne finds a quiet corner of England for us to join her for a wander :

Neighbourhood Walks : Windlesham Arboretum

Debbie travels to the most interesting places, and we’re very lucky- she takes us along :

Arty Wanderings in Hongdae

Susan has a knack for taking me just where I want to be :

Walking Golden Gate Park, San Francisco

Short and sweet, with Janet :

Monday on the Riverwalk

Lots of recipes at Jackie’s place, in case you’re hungry :

Baked goods

You never know what you’re going to find at Jesh’s, and that’s part of the fun :

City Walk

Another city, and one that’s always full of action.  Let Indra be your guide :

Hong Kong…..Walks

Fast or slow, you can’t go far wrong with Drake :

Quick steps in Strasbourg

I was followed recently by Tamar at Hike O Therapy.  Doesn’t ‘a Cornish gardener hiking through Northern Spain’ sound interesting?  Take a look!

Urkulu : A nature reserve and lake in the heart of the Basque Country

I have enormous respect for long distance walkers.  This week I had the pleasure of meeting John, for a friendly drink.  Cheers, John!  :

Nimrod

Eunice has a scalded foot so walking must be painful, but still she takes us to a lovely spot :

A local walk to Smithills Hall 

This one from Candy just scraped in before I hit the Publish button :

Serpa in the Alentejo

And this is a lovely way to finish, hand in hand with Pauline and Jack :

Surprises on the way home….

Enjoy your last day of the Bank Holiday if you’re in the UK, and to all of you, enjoy your walks!  Take care till the next time.

163 comments

  1. Beautiful pictures and spectacular gardens! Wow! Makes me proud to be a Bristish gardener!! Thanks for the shout out too. Really means alot, I’m a happy gardener today 😁😁😁

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  2. Another lovely garden and I would love to visit Northumberlandia, I remember seeing it on TV when it first opened. You have to remember that ALL Azaleas are Rhododendrons, but not all Rhodies are Azaleas. So in one respect the lady was correct. BUT I am sure the yellow scented ones are Azalea, and peering at your photos I would say they only have 5-6 stamens. Rhodies have a lot more. You’ll have to go back in winter and see if they have lost their leaves. Have a great break and take time to relax. When do you fly out to Poland?

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    1. Not the clearest photos for stamen counting- sorry 🙂 🙂 Fly out next Sunday morning and meeting Meg n’ Gilly that afternoon (if I can find them, or them me 🙂 ). Staying overnight in Leeds with James and taking them out for a meal on Saturday. Hoping internal travel works out ok and I can manage to mumble some Polish. Quiet day at home today- how about that? Rafa later. Joanna Konta was a disaster?

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      1. The tennis I have seen so far has not been inspiring. Hoping Rafa shakes things up. Sounds like you have a busy few weeks ahead of you.

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      2. And I didn’t stay home after all! Mick’s fault. We are enveloped in your sea fret so went a little way inland to Wynyard Estate, just for a tootle. Back in time for Rafa, of course 🙂 🙂

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      3. There is a Fort Wynyard in Cape Town. You took me back a few years there. I wonder if there is a connection? Named after Lieutenant-General Robert Henry Wynyard in the 1860s.

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  3. Northumberland looks so green. Amazing shots all round and it did look like you covered some ground. PIty about the icy winds and hailstones…hope your umbrella as enough protection. Have a good week lovely 🙂

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    1. The hailstones were in March when the weather was throwing everything at us, Mabel. 🙂 🙂 Surprisingly pleasant recently. If you live in the right place, of course. Enormous electrical storms down south yesterday. Always trouble for someone! Thanks, hon. Have fun!

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  4. Fabulous! I love a walled garden, that viaduct looks great, and I am always entranced by a landscape garden…thanks for my virtual walk!

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    1. Thanks for your enthusiasm, Sue! I’ve just put the laptop off so I might get something done so I can’t see the photo you commented on. Think it might just have been used for climbers. Grey again here today and waiting to hear from the prodigal whether we are expected in Leeds. As Jude says there’s always the tennis! Lazy one for you? X

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  5. Lovely pictures as always Jo. There is a Lutyens memorial sculpture in Ayscoughfee Hall Gardens in Spalding where I used to live. It was one of my favourite things about the town!

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    1. Thanks, Andrew. 🙂 🙂 A quiet one at home while Kim catches up with the laundry? There’s a lovely shot of her in your post. Did you avoid travel disruptions and the thunderstorms?

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      1. Waiting to hear from the prodigal one as to whether we’re expected down at Leeds. He loves to keep us in suspense. 🙂 🙂 Half an eye on French Open tennis as our weather’s back in the doldrums after a lovely day with the hot air balloons at Durham yesterday.

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  6. What a gorgeous garden and such a rich history Jo. And what? No camera at the ready for that disturbed deer!!! But you have given me such a fill of colour and beauty. I love the reflections. I am so envious of all the gardens and thank you for sharing them with us. Enjoy your time out and will look forward to seeing what you have been up to when you get back and have had time to catch your breath

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    1. My camera was in my hand, Pauline, but I just stood there gobsmacked. 🙂 🙂 Great reflexes! We had such a lovely day out, and then later in the week Cragside too. More rhodies to come but no idea when I’ll post, and you all need a breather 🙂 Thanks a lot, hon. We’re off to the Algarve the day after I get back from Nottingham. No rest for the wicked!

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  7. A very interesting and informative walk Jo. Northumberlandia looks very intriguing and one to definitely visit if I ever get up that way again – I don’t think it existed when I went that way six years ago. The gardens are lovely and the splashes of bright pink colour are great. I experienced a deer crashing out of a hedge in front of me a couple of years ago, it happened so fast it was gone before I could even reach for the camera. I hope you enjoy your visits to Poland and Nottingham – catch up with you again soon 🙂

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      1. Up in Queensland – Lamington National Park. I’m quite excited by the prospect.

        Naturally, I’ll be looking to get a poem/picture project out of it, but lots of other stuff, as well.

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