Thursday Thoughts – Great Dixter

When we left Sissinghurst that day, I wondered how any garden would be able to match it. But, Great Dixter did. Great Dixter is a house in Northiam, East Sussex, England. It was built in 1910–12 by architect Edwin Lutyens. The original Northiam house, dating from the mid-15th century, was acquired by a businessman named Nathaniel Lloyd in 1909.

Lloyd and Lutyens began the garden at Great Dixter, but it was Lloyd’s son Christopher Lloyd, a well known garden writer and television personality, who made it famous. The garden is in the arts and crafts style, where the planting is profuse, yet structured, and has featured many bold experiments of form, colour and combination.

The garden is currently managed by Fergus Garrett, who worked closely with Lloyd up until his death in 2006 as Head Gardener and introduced a number of innovations into the planting scheme.

I hope you enjoy the variety of this garden in my short gallery! For species and other facts, please visit Jude again!

I am sorry to say I haven’t even tried to find the names of all the flowers, but, Jude will know.

They are all glorious. The house and gardens are my number one from this week.

There will still be more gardens to come…

35 reaktioner på ”Thursday Thoughts – Great Dixter

  1. The integration of an imaginative and innovative natural infrastructure with the urban or rural construction of human dwellings is part of modern art for a better human lifestyle.

  2. I think I preferred it to Sissinghurst. At least when I visited several years ago. There was much more in the way of colour. And the house itself is a beauty. I love your poppy head photo!

  3. Pingback: Thursday Thoughts – Great Dixter - Fotofeed

  4. Pingback: Thursday Thoughts – Great Dixter - Bloggfeed

Lämna ett svar till Rebecca Cuningham Avbryt svar

Denna webbplats använder Akismet för att minska skräppost. Lär dig om hur din kommentarsdata bearbetas.