Dyffryn Fernant - a garden in Wales

Green and Gorgeous - Flower Farmer Rachel Siegfried’s Year

Green and Gorgeous

- Flower Farmer Rachel Siegfried’s Year

We spent a full year filming flower farmer Rachel Siegfried and her partner Ash Pearson on their beautiful farm Green and Gorgeous in Oxfordshire.  Rachel guides us through all the major annual tasks, beginning with seed sowing on a frosty January morning, working through all four seasons; until we finally discover how she spends the deep, winter days at her potter’s wheel.  Rachel demonstrates the major annual tasks and shares with us her years of accumulated knowledge, and tips on which plants are her key performers at each stage of the year.  Each seasonal film is packed with practical information for anyone wanting to grow cut flowers and foliage, whether it be for home use or on a larger, commercial scale. Our videographer John Campbell uses carefully crafted shots to deliver a film that is not only visually beautiful but also with the practical tools to turn your inspiration into cut flower production!

Dyffryn Fernant - a garden in Wales

“Dyffryn Fernant is a garden in west Wales which I have chosen to document as I feel it is a very special place, both in terms of spirit, which John Campbell has done a remarkable job in capturing here, and because of the many practical ways in which it is exceptional - the way it blends into a very special landscape, the range of planting, from the exuberant to the very subtle, and the way it integrates sculpture and its creator’s life into its fabric….. in 35+ years of writing about gardens, this is one of my very favourites” Noel Kingsbury

45mins

Wildside - two films about a unique garden

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Wildside is a unique garden in Devon, in south-west England. Created since 2004 by Keith and Ros Wiley, it is a place of great beauty, says Keith, of ‘risk taking’. Literally carved out of a field, the garden plays with our perceptions of space and at the same time creates ideal conditions for a huge range of plants.

We have produced two films about the garden with specialist garden filmaker John Campbell, the result of four filming sessions. One is a narrative - Wildside, the Story of a Garden, the other is more practical and helps explain its magic - Wildside through the Seasons. You can find out more of John’s work here - Room of Light.

Wildside - the story of a garden

This film, based on a series of interviews with Keith, and lyrical photography from John, is a deeply moving story about making the garden, and Keith’s determination to keep going after the death of Ros in 2019 and the pandemic the year after.

“I just wanted to say again, thank you for enabling our group to view the Wildside film at our meeting on Friday. What a beautiful film that highlighted Keith’s passion for both the garden and Ros. Keith’s words were indeed a tribute to her, in places very moving yet at times brought smiles all round. I felt very privileged to see it as did our members and Wildside is on my list of must visit destinations.” - 96mins

Erika… Nottinghamshire Hardy Plant Society, November, 2023

Available to garden clubs and other groups. Please enquire

Wildside - through the seasons

An edit that follows Keith Wiley through the year - his remarkable spring garden with naturalising bulbs, the exuberant summer garden, the intense colours of autumn and the bare bones of winter.

Learn about how Keith has shaped and sculpted his land to create conditions that an extraordinary array of plants, how he uses and shapes trees to make microclimates, and about how he integrates so many plant species into a coherent artistic vision.

There is some overlap with Story of a Garden, but much also much new material. Available as one of our film recordings.

Wildside through the Seasons

SUMMER

Keith explores a favourite maple glade and the perennials that grow here, moving on to look at dieramas, a genus that has done particularly well here, seeding itself around to abandon. He goes on to look at how moisture loving plants can survive through deep rooting, and then wider issues such as how he sculpts the landscape, so that there is a multiplicity of aspects, and a diversity of habitats.

All gardeners will be keen to learn about how he combines spring bulbs with late-emerging perennials, the summer pruning of perennials and how he combines grasses with perennials. Finally Keith explores the Courtyard garden and pergola, two of the more 'conventional' parts of Wildside

AUTUMN

Getting it right with perennials can involve some summer cut-backs, Keith following this up with discussing the impacts we then see in the autumn. He goes on to look at the silhouettes of the trunks of the trees he has growing at Wildside, and in general at how to make the most of the character of the trees he has, including shaping them. He also looks at the ways in which trees control the way we look at the places where they grow, for example encouraging us to think about viewing under tree canopies.

WINTER

Winter brings clarity, an opportunity for Keith to discuss how he has been shaping the ground, using paths to define beds to guide the visitor through the garden's topography, and to reveal different soil depths, leading him on to talk about using coarse sand as growing medium. He lookks at recreating or capturing the essence of natural wild landscapes in the garden, stylising plantings to get emotional impact and using trees to create different atmospheres. There's some footage of training standard wisterias, managing dieramas and some thoughts on distribution patterns for spring flowers.

SPRING

Keith enthuses about magnolias, hellebores, corydalis, trilliums, and in particular about how some of his choice spring flowers are actually naturalising, such as Narcissus cyclamineus and erythroniums. He also looks at cutting down and managing grasses, the importance of shapes in the design of the garden and how he works with different backdrops for the plants he grows, often quite surprising ones such as the scree created by digging into the loose shale underlying Wildside.

We’re very grateful for the pictures in the gallery below - all are courtesy of Dianne Giles,

a garden and landscape photographer, who has also documented Wildside. You can see more of her work here.