A visit to Long Barn Gardens, Kent

The courtyard at Long Barn Gardens, June 2025

Among the services offered by Perennial are a range of garden tours, many to gardens which are not often open to the public. Long Barn Gardens is one of those. Harold Nicolson and Vita Sackville-West bought Sissinghurst in 1930, but for 15 years before that they lived at Long Barn and it is interesting to look for the elements here which they later expanded and refined at Sissinghurst. On the edge of the village of Sevenoaks Weald, the garden has retained its long views over wooded countryside and has been the family home of Rebecca Lemonius and her husband who have lived here since 2007.

Like the house itself, the garden has developed as a kind of hotch-potch with bits added on over the years and there is a wonderful informality and intimacy about the place. Rebecca emphasises that although they garden with Vita Sackville-West’s ethos and style in mind, the emphasis is on the atmosphere which she created.

Continue reading A visit to Long Barn Gardens, Kent

May 2025 Talk: Francesca Murray on The Gardeners’ Royal Benevolent Institution

On 19 May we welcomed Dr. Francesca Murray to give a talk on ‘The Gardeners’ Royal Benevolent Institution and its horticultural heroes and heroines’.

Dr Francesca Murray speaking at CABAHS, May 2025

Dr. Murray is an author, speaker and researcher on garden history and the horticultural trades, with a special interest in nineteenth century gardeners and nursery owners.
Her talk focused on the range of benevolent, mutual aid and charitable societies – as well as the individual characters that founded and used them – that were set up in support of gardeners, florists and associated trades in the years before the welfare state was even considered.

Continue reading May 2025 Talk: Francesca Murray on The Gardeners’ Royal Benevolent Institution

Are we Feeling Christmas-y yet?

Logo Christmas

At this ho-ho jolly time of year I expect everyone is looking forward to getting some good Christmas gardening presents! (Yes? No? Bah Humbug?)

I asked the committee what ideas they have this year, and we came up with the selection below. I hope it gives you some inspiration, or at least is something you can use when asked the dreaded question “What would you like for Christmas this year?”


Books: The Power of Trees by Peter Wohlleben. This was reviewed recently in the RHS magazine and I have seen it recommended elsewhere too. Waterstones says it is “a manifesto aimed at preserving the future of our forests and debunking accepted wisdom about tree-planting schemes”.

Books: What did the Tree See by Charlotte Guillain. I bought this for my grandson, it’s one of those childrens books that covers a huge age range. He is far too young to understand the whole thing at 3, but loves the pictures and storytelling. Much older children will like the historical side of it. And OAP’s like me love it too!

Continue reading Are we Feeling Christmas-y yet?