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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,520 I believe that a really good way to understand a culture is through its gardens. 2 00:00:07,520 --> 00:00:12,880 This is an extraordinary journey to visit 80 inspiring gardens from all over the world. 3 00:00:12,880 --> 00:00:17,200 Some are very well known - the Taj Mahal, the Alhambra. 4 00:00:17,200 --> 00:00:22,480 And I'm also challenging my idea of what a garden actually is. 5 00:00:22,480 --> 00:00:25,640 So I'm visiting gardens that float on the Amazon, 6 00:00:25,640 --> 00:00:27,760 a strange fantasy in the jungle, 7 00:00:27,760 --> 00:00:30,760 as well as the private homes of great designers, 8 00:00:30,760 --> 00:00:33,160 and the desert flowering in a garden. 9 00:00:33,160 --> 00:00:37,720 And wherever I go I shall be meeting people that share my own passion for gardens 10 00:00:37,720 --> 00:00:44,200 on my epic quest to see the world through 80 of its most fascinating and beautiful gardens. 11 00:01:00,280 --> 00:01:04,960 If you set yourself to visit 80 gardens around the world, 12 00:01:04,960 --> 00:01:06,160 then you have to come 13 00:01:06,160 --> 00:01:10,240 to the richest and most powerful nation in the world. 14 00:01:10,240 --> 00:01:14,440 America is a country that has been built on optimism, 15 00:01:14,440 --> 00:01:16,760 amazingly diverse natural resources 16 00:01:16,760 --> 00:01:19,560 and an enthusiasm that, in my experience, 17 00:01:19,560 --> 00:01:23,200 empowers it to tackle anything with a real sense of creative purpose 18 00:01:23,200 --> 00:01:26,640 that is incredibly invigorating. 19 00:01:26,640 --> 00:01:30,880 And what I want to see on my journey around this vast country 20 00:01:30,880 --> 00:01:35,600 is how America takes all that wealth, 21 00:01:35,600 --> 00:01:40,320 all that incredible energy, and expresses it in the garden. 22 00:01:46,960 --> 00:01:50,640 I'm starting my journey in New York, where garden guerrillas 23 00:01:50,640 --> 00:01:53,560 are creating community gardens from derelict land. 24 00:01:53,560 --> 00:01:56,960 Then I shall travel south, to Virginia, to visit a garden 25 00:01:56,960 --> 00:02:00,760 that embodies the history and birth of the nation. 26 00:02:00,760 --> 00:02:02,600 Finally, I shall go west 27 00:02:02,600 --> 00:02:05,880 across to the other side of the continent to California, 28 00:02:05,880 --> 00:02:09,200 to see gardens touched by the glamour and glitz of show business. 29 00:02:18,200 --> 00:02:22,720 New York might be synonymous with the cityscape of Manhattan, 30 00:02:22,720 --> 00:02:25,400 but most of the state is actually very rural, 31 00:02:25,400 --> 00:02:29,400 and the upstate suburban towns have a very different feel 32 00:02:29,400 --> 00:02:32,400 to the intense, edgy energy of the city. 33 00:02:44,440 --> 00:02:50,360 My first garden of this trip is right down at the end of Long Island, in the Hamptons, 34 00:02:50,360 --> 00:02:56,520 and it's the LongHouse which is the home and garden of the textile designer and weaver, Jack Larsen. 35 00:02:56,520 --> 00:02:58,560 Now, he is hugely successful, 36 00:02:58,560 --> 00:03:00,800 and what I want to see is how someone 37 00:03:00,800 --> 00:03:04,120 who is very successful in one field applies it to their garden. 38 00:03:04,120 --> 00:03:07,880 It's a garden that self consciously nurtures the other arts. 39 00:03:07,880 --> 00:03:10,520 In fact, it's even a garden as a gallery. 40 00:03:10,520 --> 00:03:14,280 Now, nothing could be more different from European gardens, 41 00:03:14,280 --> 00:03:16,120 and that's why I've come here. 42 00:03:17,160 --> 00:03:20,080 Larsen began the garden in the mid 1980s, 43 00:03:20,080 --> 00:03:22,880 expressly as a place to display works of art 44 00:03:22,880 --> 00:03:26,520 with an eclectic mix of cultures and styles, which, paradoxically, 45 00:03:26,520 --> 00:03:30,760 seems to me to be a good way to try and pin down some kind of 46 00:03:30,760 --> 00:03:32,760 American culture and style. 47 00:03:44,040 --> 00:03:46,560 This is not what I'd expected at all. 48 00:03:53,320 --> 00:03:58,360 The gardens house temporary and permanent installations from Larsen himself 49 00:03:58,360 --> 00:04:01,400 and a variety of established artists, like Dale Chihuly, 50 00:04:01,400 --> 00:04:04,280 who was responsible for this blown-glass sculpture. 51 00:04:05,800 --> 00:04:06,880 Ooh art! 52 00:04:10,320 --> 00:04:12,520 Dunno. 53 00:04:12,520 --> 00:04:14,360 Dunno about that. 54 00:04:18,440 --> 00:04:19,640 Oh! 55 00:04:22,000 --> 00:04:23,680 I love this. 56 00:04:27,200 --> 00:04:33,520 I didn't realise it was so self-consciously and up front a sort of display of artwork. 57 00:04:39,880 --> 00:04:42,640 Most contemporary sculpture 58 00:04:42,640 --> 00:04:44,600 is best in the garden. 59 00:04:44,600 --> 00:04:48,880 It's best in the open air, where you get strong highlight and shadow. 60 00:04:48,880 --> 00:04:55,000 The changing of different weathers and so forth, times of the day, 61 00:04:55,000 --> 00:04:58,400 enlivens surfaces that you don't get 62 00:04:58,400 --> 00:05:00,280 in a museum or gallery, 63 00:05:00,280 --> 00:05:07,320 and that the organic textural backdrop is kind to these hard forms. 64 00:05:09,640 --> 00:05:13,360 One thing that I find very attractive 65 00:05:13,360 --> 00:05:18,560 is that one can be rather spontaneous in gardens. 66 00:05:18,560 --> 00:05:24,240 I'm a fabric designer, and a design takes at least a year, 67 00:05:24,240 --> 00:05:27,200 but gardening is much more direct. 68 00:05:27,200 --> 00:05:31,320 It's like performing art, you get a feedback quickly. 69 00:05:31,320 --> 00:05:33,440 I like that. 70 00:05:44,760 --> 00:05:47,640 Isn't that beautiful? 71 00:05:47,640 --> 00:05:49,200 Isn't that wonderful? 72 00:05:55,040 --> 00:05:59,720 LongHouse covers nearly 16 acres of East Hampton Great North Woods. 73 00:05:59,720 --> 00:06:02,720 Since he acquired the land in 1975, 74 00:06:02,720 --> 00:06:06,720 Larsen has laid out major spaces as settings for plant collections, 75 00:06:06,720 --> 00:06:09,680 ornamental borders and sculpture. 76 00:06:09,680 --> 00:06:12,240 Just like a gallery, the artwork comes and goes. 77 00:06:17,560 --> 00:06:20,200 That's good. 78 00:06:20,200 --> 00:06:25,720 The rams' heads with the white birch next to it. 79 00:06:30,920 --> 00:06:32,920 How beautiful is that? 80 00:06:35,920 --> 00:06:39,840 Well, of course, you get that effect by letting a tree grow and then 81 00:06:39,840 --> 00:06:46,000 just cutting it off at the base, and it resprouts with multi stems. 82 00:06:46,000 --> 00:06:50,040 But this has done it so beautifully. 83 00:06:51,680 --> 00:06:57,560 The great thing about having artwork of any sort in a garden 84 00:06:57,560 --> 00:06:59,440 is you start to look at planting. 85 00:06:59,440 --> 00:07:01,680 You start to look at plants as works of art. 86 00:07:11,320 --> 00:07:16,960 I mean, one wonders which came first - the sculpture or the planting. 87 00:07:16,960 --> 00:07:20,120 They look like fastigiate hornbeams to me. 88 00:07:29,040 --> 00:07:33,960 As a gardener, I think the fact these are in pots is really significant. 89 00:07:33,960 --> 00:07:39,240 It means you can create avenues like this overnight, if you've got the money. 90 00:07:39,240 --> 00:07:42,640 So, the garden becomes a sort of stage set. 91 00:07:45,200 --> 00:07:48,320 One of the permanent installations is the red garden, 92 00:07:48,320 --> 00:07:50,360 which was designed by Larsen himself. 93 00:07:53,440 --> 00:07:55,200 Now, I like that very much indeed. 94 00:07:55,200 --> 00:07:57,240 I like that a lot. 95 00:07:57,240 --> 00:08:01,800 I think it works instantly, partly because it's so simple. 96 00:08:01,800 --> 00:08:04,480 Brilliant red forms and the clipped azaleas. 97 00:08:05,640 --> 00:08:09,680 What you don't see from here is the posts, diminished right down, 98 00:08:09,680 --> 00:08:12,800 to give you the sense of perspective. 99 00:08:16,480 --> 00:08:19,000 I love the elephant balancing on his trunk. 100 00:08:36,560 --> 00:08:39,440 The inspiration for the design of the house 101 00:08:39,440 --> 00:08:43,960 is taken from the seventh-century Shinto shrine at Ise in Japan, 102 00:08:43,960 --> 00:08:47,240 which is one of Larsen's favourite buildings, 103 00:08:47,240 --> 00:08:53,840 and the planting around the house is very sculptural and architectural. 104 00:08:53,840 --> 00:08:55,800 I love looking underneath buildings. 105 00:08:57,400 --> 00:09:00,280 There's more garden on the other side. 106 00:09:02,600 --> 00:09:07,080 See, that's great. That's a really, really nice view. 107 00:09:12,240 --> 00:09:17,600 This has been a fascinating beginning to this journey. 108 00:09:17,600 --> 00:09:24,000 The mixture and the abundance of everything is quite difficult to absorb. 109 00:09:24,000 --> 00:09:26,960 But it does seem that what you have here 110 00:09:26,960 --> 00:09:33,360 is an extraordinary breadth and confidence of vision. 111 00:09:36,320 --> 00:09:39,840 But Jack Larsen has a large canvas to work with, 112 00:09:39,840 --> 00:09:43,400 here in the bucolic setting of the New York State countryside. 113 00:09:45,600 --> 00:09:51,320 Now I want to go to Manhattan and see how gardens are shaping INSIDE the big city. 114 00:09:58,440 --> 00:10:01,760 New York City is a uniquely dynamic metropolis, 115 00:10:01,760 --> 00:10:03,520 with eight million inhabitants. 116 00:10:03,520 --> 00:10:08,640 Manhattan, the central island, is one of the most densely-populated places in the world. 117 00:10:08,640 --> 00:10:12,440 Any green space is valuable in every sense of the word, 118 00:10:12,440 --> 00:10:15,760 so any available land that might possibly become real estate 119 00:10:15,760 --> 00:10:18,440 rarely gets made into private gardens. 120 00:10:18,440 --> 00:10:24,080 This means for many New Yorkers, Central Park is the only green space they have access to. 121 00:10:24,080 --> 00:10:29,440 It's a huge rectangle, two and a half miles long by half a mile wide, 122 00:10:29,440 --> 00:10:31,280 right in the centre of Manhattan, 123 00:10:31,280 --> 00:10:34,640 and the most widely-visited park in the whole United States. 124 00:10:34,640 --> 00:10:38,240 It was designed in 1857 by Frederick Olmsted. 125 00:10:38,240 --> 00:10:40,280 Although it looks very naturalistic, 126 00:10:40,280 --> 00:10:43,320 it is, in fact, entirely man-made and landscaped. 127 00:10:51,160 --> 00:10:54,400 This part of Central Park has real meaning for me. 128 00:10:54,400 --> 00:10:58,000 It's Strawberry Fields, which is the memorial garden to John Lennon, 129 00:10:58,000 --> 00:11:01,040 who lived in the Dakota Building just across the road. 130 00:11:01,040 --> 00:11:03,640 Now, John Lennon was a huge hero of mine. 131 00:11:03,640 --> 00:11:06,880 He influenced me when I was growing up more than anybody else, 132 00:11:06,880 --> 00:11:12,120 so that his death, and the resulting garden, had great impact, 133 00:11:12,120 --> 00:11:15,160 and Central Park then becomes personal. 134 00:11:15,160 --> 00:11:18,240 I guess that's the way people work in vast parks. 135 00:11:18,240 --> 00:11:20,720 The whole thing is too big, it's too big an idea, 136 00:11:20,720 --> 00:11:23,480 too big geography to be any kind of garden. 137 00:11:23,480 --> 00:11:27,040 But people come and take little bits of it, 138 00:11:27,040 --> 00:11:29,520 and I think that's the way it works in a big city. 139 00:11:29,520 --> 00:11:32,760 You take bits of public space and you start to possess them, 140 00:11:32,760 --> 00:11:35,000 even though you don't literally own them, 141 00:11:35,000 --> 00:11:38,000 and what I'm really interested in doing here in Manhattan 142 00:11:38,000 --> 00:11:44,080 is seeing how public space can become personal, 143 00:11:44,080 --> 00:11:48,280 connected to an area and, therefore, be properly called a garden. 144 00:12:05,480 --> 00:12:10,560 I've come across the East River from Manhattan to Queens, to Gantry Plaza, 145 00:12:10,560 --> 00:12:15,760 which is a public space designed by the landscape architect Thomas Balsley. 146 00:12:15,760 --> 00:12:19,080 And I want to meet and talk to him to explore the possibility 147 00:12:19,080 --> 00:12:23,320 of creating public spaces that have sufficient meaning, 148 00:12:23,320 --> 00:12:27,200 that they then become, by default, gardens. 149 00:12:29,200 --> 00:12:32,000 The gantries that give this two-acre park its name 150 00:12:32,000 --> 00:12:38,000 were used until the 1970s to load railway cars and cargo onto river barges. 151 00:12:38,000 --> 00:12:41,800 Thomas Balsley is one of America's leading public landscape architects 152 00:12:41,800 --> 00:12:43,840 and feels his design for Gantry Plaza, 153 00:12:43,840 --> 00:12:46,760 with its strong links to its history and surroundings, 154 00:12:46,760 --> 00:12:51,200 transform it into a legitimate garden space for the local community 155 00:12:51,200 --> 00:12:52,840 in this dense urban landscape. 156 00:12:56,400 --> 00:12:59,920 I'm really interested in the way that 157 00:12:59,920 --> 00:13:04,960 a space, a green space, moves from being a park to a garden, 158 00:13:04,960 --> 00:13:08,680 and, of course, gardens is what I'm interested in. 159 00:13:08,680 --> 00:13:12,520 What, for you, defines a public garden? 160 00:13:12,520 --> 00:13:15,360 A garden, when you put that word together with public, 161 00:13:15,360 --> 00:13:18,120 in my mind, doesn't have to have horticulture at all. 162 00:13:18,120 --> 00:13:22,440 It's that place where we can all escape our lives, 163 00:13:22,440 --> 00:13:26,880 our apartments, the places we live, or work, or the streets we walk down, 164 00:13:26,880 --> 00:13:30,760 and it's that place where we can transport ourselves into another realm. 165 00:13:30,760 --> 00:13:34,880 If we've done a good job, it's that we have created this common ground 166 00:13:34,880 --> 00:13:40,360 for people to find themselves and each other and to build social connections. 167 00:13:40,360 --> 00:13:45,360 I'm really interested how you've created the garden, or the park, 168 00:13:45,360 --> 00:13:49,040 using the iconography of the place. 169 00:13:49,040 --> 00:13:53,560 The space must have a meaning. That meaning can be translated in different settings. 170 00:13:53,560 --> 00:13:58,080 We all wanted to celebrate the heritage of this place. 171 00:13:58,080 --> 00:14:03,600 The decision to really bring the gantries out front and centre 172 00:14:03,600 --> 00:14:09,160 came from this need of ours for there to be real icons of this railroad history of this place. 173 00:14:09,160 --> 00:14:11,720 The more and more we thought about the gantries, 174 00:14:11,720 --> 00:14:14,680 the gantries are the icon of this place, 175 00:14:14,680 --> 00:14:17,840 and it didn't require lots of little historical motifs 176 00:14:17,840 --> 00:14:20,000 to be scattered around to tell the story. 177 00:14:20,000 --> 00:14:22,320 They tell the story in such a compelling way 178 00:14:22,320 --> 00:14:24,880 that there was very little more that we could do. 179 00:14:33,280 --> 00:14:36,960 This is an amazing sight, with that incredible skyline, 180 00:14:36,960 --> 00:14:40,600 and there are elements here that anybody would recognise as a garden. 181 00:14:40,600 --> 00:14:42,120 But I feel this is a process, 182 00:14:42,120 --> 00:14:45,440 and it's one that is very difficult to pin down, 183 00:14:45,440 --> 00:14:48,720 it's when a garden is not a garden, 184 00:14:48,720 --> 00:14:51,120 or when it's just an interesting public space. 185 00:14:51,120 --> 00:14:55,040 That may not matter. I suspect in the scheme of things it's not important. 186 00:14:55,040 --> 00:14:59,280 If it works and it's enjoyable, so be it. 187 00:14:59,280 --> 00:15:01,800 But I think I want to take this one step further. 188 00:15:01,800 --> 00:15:05,960 But is there a way that people can actually possess it from day to day, 189 00:15:05,960 --> 00:15:08,360 where they can manipulate the change? 190 00:15:08,360 --> 00:15:10,840 That seems to me the really interesting thing. 191 00:15:22,680 --> 00:15:25,440 Down on the Lower East Side is the Liz Christy Garden, 192 00:15:25,440 --> 00:15:28,400 the first community garden to be made in the city. 193 00:15:41,040 --> 00:15:43,560 Tell me, how did this garden begin? 194 00:15:43,560 --> 00:15:45,480 What's the history behind it? 195 00:15:45,480 --> 00:15:48,600 The Liz Christy Garden is the first of the community gardens 196 00:15:48,600 --> 00:15:50,560 in Manhattan and the five boroughs. 197 00:15:50,560 --> 00:15:53,080 - Right. - It was begun by a woman named Liz Christy. 198 00:15:53,080 --> 00:15:55,760 She and her friends lived in the neighbourhood. 199 00:15:55,760 --> 00:15:59,840 She was a painter, and I believe she did some kind of social work. 200 00:15:59,840 --> 00:16:01,960 - When was this? - 1973. 201 00:16:01,960 --> 00:16:08,440 - Right, '73. - And she and her friends would make seed bombs and throw them into vacant lots. - Right. 202 00:16:08,440 --> 00:16:12,440 And that was one way to reclaim abandoned areas. 203 00:16:12,440 --> 00:16:16,720 This was owned by the city, and when the Liz Christy Garden began, 204 00:16:16,720 --> 00:16:21,000 they rented it for about a dollar month, so 12 a year. 205 00:16:21,000 --> 00:16:24,440 And we, the gardeners, I became a gardener in '85, 206 00:16:24,440 --> 00:16:26,760 maintained it as a community garden 207 00:16:26,760 --> 00:16:31,040 before it became officially part of the New York City Parks Department. 208 00:16:31,040 --> 00:16:35,840 So these gardens went from being vacant lots with seed bombs 209 00:16:35,840 --> 00:16:39,520 to something that people were prepared to campaign to preserve 210 00:16:39,520 --> 00:16:43,320 - and spend money to preserve. - Yeah, right. 211 00:16:43,320 --> 00:16:45,560 What's their function? What are they for? 212 00:16:45,560 --> 00:16:50,160 To provide an outlet for our very fundamental human desire 213 00:16:50,160 --> 00:16:53,400 to dig the dirt and to work with plants. 214 00:16:53,400 --> 00:16:57,200 And the will to keep them is strong. 215 00:16:57,200 --> 00:17:00,800 - Didn't Giuliani want to sell them all off? - Oh, sure he did, exactly. 216 00:17:00,800 --> 00:17:03,520 There's been always a struggle between developers 217 00:17:03,520 --> 00:17:05,920 and the interests of developers for housing, 218 00:17:05,920 --> 00:17:08,760 and I've always said that it's not housing or gardens, 219 00:17:08,760 --> 00:17:11,120 it's housing AND gardens that people need. 220 00:17:11,120 --> 00:17:12,360 And housing and noise! 221 00:17:12,360 --> 00:17:18,080 The soundtrack in this garden is always completely opposite of what you see. 222 00:17:33,520 --> 00:17:36,200 Well, I like everything about this garden. 223 00:17:36,200 --> 00:17:39,640 I like the way it looks, I like what they've done to it, 224 00:17:39,640 --> 00:17:42,320 but above all I like the fact that it exists. 225 00:17:42,320 --> 00:17:48,160 I even like the traffic hammering behind it because that's what it is. 226 00:17:48,160 --> 00:17:52,960 It's reclaimed space in the middle of downtown Manhattan, 227 00:17:52,960 --> 00:17:55,680 and it's a very noisy, busy place. 228 00:17:55,680 --> 00:17:58,040 It's part of the identity of the gardens. 229 00:18:00,760 --> 00:18:03,560 But now I'm leaving all that noise and business 230 00:18:03,560 --> 00:18:05,080 and going south to Maryland, 231 00:18:05,080 --> 00:18:07,920 to visit one of America's foremost garden designers, 232 00:18:07,920 --> 00:18:11,840 who is creating gardens that are new and very American. 233 00:18:20,840 --> 00:18:23,560 This is part of Chesapeake Bay, 234 00:18:23,560 --> 00:18:26,760 which is the largest estuary in America, 235 00:18:26,760 --> 00:18:31,600 where the rich and the successful politicians 236 00:18:31,600 --> 00:18:34,280 come to spend their weekends and their holidays. 237 00:18:37,480 --> 00:18:42,360 The big Atlantic skies, with its wide horizons and the natural flora, 238 00:18:42,360 --> 00:18:45,400 drew James van Sweden to this coast, 239 00:18:45,400 --> 00:18:47,920 about an hour away from his Washington base, 240 00:18:47,920 --> 00:18:51,880 because it reminded him of the Michigan meadows where he grew up. 241 00:18:53,080 --> 00:18:54,720 Well, here I am. 242 00:18:54,720 --> 00:18:58,880 This is James van Sweden's weekend holiday home. 243 00:19:09,920 --> 00:19:13,520 James van Sweden is one of America's leading landscape designers, 244 00:19:13,520 --> 00:19:16,960 and has created gardens for Oprah Winfrey and other celebrities. 245 00:19:16,960 --> 00:19:19,800 His gardens are always natural, free spirited, 246 00:19:19,800 --> 00:19:23,400 and are designed for low maintenance and high sustainability. 247 00:19:23,400 --> 00:19:27,520 His work pays homage to the natural grasslands of North America, 248 00:19:27,520 --> 00:19:31,080 but it's also a reaction against the tightly-mown lawns 249 00:19:31,080 --> 00:19:34,200 that still dominate the American suburban garden. 250 00:19:36,760 --> 00:19:42,760 This garden inverts the relationship between houses and gardens 251 00:19:42,760 --> 00:19:45,320 that I've seen endlessly on the road here, 252 00:19:45,320 --> 00:19:48,280 where you have mown grass going up to the front door 253 00:19:48,280 --> 00:19:51,240 and you keep looking for the garden to begin. 254 00:19:51,240 --> 00:19:55,640 Whereas here, you keep looking for the garden to end. 255 00:19:55,640 --> 00:20:00,400 But it doesn't, it just dissolves out into the landscape. 256 00:20:03,520 --> 00:20:08,400 Where you have a garden that merges so completely with the surrounding landscape, 257 00:20:08,400 --> 00:20:12,280 there can be a bit of confusion about what's garden and what's not garden, 258 00:20:12,480 --> 00:20:16,320 and just by cutting this curving path through the grass 259 00:20:16,320 --> 00:20:20,080 it brilliantly defines the space around it, it makes it into a garden. 260 00:20:20,080 --> 00:20:22,280 It's not a lot, but it's enough. 261 00:20:45,920 --> 00:20:50,200 When you came here, did you have in your mind what you wanted to do? 262 00:20:50,200 --> 00:20:54,480 I did. When I bought this land it was empty and flat. 263 00:20:54,480 --> 00:20:58,880 And what I wanted to do was build a house that floated over a meadow, 264 00:20:58,880 --> 00:21:01,440 and I thought this was the perfect place to do it. 265 00:21:01,440 --> 00:21:06,360 Now, for clients you often have to design a very gardenesque kind of garden, you know, pretty. 266 00:21:06,360 --> 00:21:09,600 But I wanted a garden that was not pretty. 267 00:21:09,600 --> 00:21:11,640 In fact, I said, "I want an ugly garden, 268 00:21:11,640 --> 00:21:13,440 "I'm so sick of pretty, pretty." 269 00:21:13,440 --> 00:21:19,800 And so I designed a garden that I thought was tough, was sustainable, 270 00:21:19,800 --> 00:21:23,320 and I have no watering, I don't water anything here. 271 00:21:23,320 --> 00:21:27,600 Not having chemicals and just a minimum of weeding... 272 00:21:27,600 --> 00:21:30,000 I'm very flexible about weeds, 273 00:21:30,000 --> 00:21:33,720 so that's why the whole garden looks quite a bit like a meadow. 274 00:21:33,720 --> 00:21:39,000 One thing about having no lawn, it brings nature right up to the house. 275 00:21:39,000 --> 00:21:42,000 Snakes, foxes, turkeys... 276 00:21:42,000 --> 00:21:45,880 I have wild turkeys walking right by, ten feet from the windows. 277 00:21:45,880 --> 00:21:49,840 I have deer coming up. It's fantastic, it's just wonderful. 278 00:21:49,840 --> 00:21:52,600 But it terrifies Americans, I think, to some extent. 279 00:21:54,440 --> 00:21:59,520 Driving along and seeing these very large houses often, 280 00:21:59,520 --> 00:22:03,840 with no cultivated garden, there'll be lawn mown outside, 281 00:22:03,840 --> 00:22:06,200 is a very strange experience for a European. 282 00:22:06,200 --> 00:22:11,120 Why is it that you think the garden culture doesn't seem to express itself very freely here? 283 00:22:11,120 --> 00:22:14,080 I don't think Americans necessarily want to be outside. 284 00:22:14,080 --> 00:22:19,480 When they are outside they want to play golf and they want to swim and so on, and play. 285 00:22:19,480 --> 00:22:23,160 But I don't think they really want to garden. I think it's too much work. 286 00:22:23,160 --> 00:22:25,560 It's very hot so they don't want to be outside. 287 00:22:25,560 --> 00:22:27,200 They're also afraid of a bug. 288 00:22:27,200 --> 00:22:30,960 They're afraid they'll be cold or hot, whatever. 289 00:22:30,960 --> 00:22:33,880 So it's not really a gardening country. 290 00:22:55,440 --> 00:22:58,960 This garden is a synthesis 291 00:22:58,960 --> 00:23:04,920 of the very modern and natural indigenous plants, 292 00:23:04,920 --> 00:23:10,240 taking a garden with huge skill to make it look effortless 293 00:23:10,240 --> 00:23:12,920 and carefree, and it's brilliant, I think. 294 00:23:12,920 --> 00:23:17,520 It works wonderfully well and is a real model for the way gardens could go. 295 00:23:17,520 --> 00:23:21,160 But now, from here, I'm going to go back in time. 296 00:23:21,160 --> 00:23:24,280 I want to go back to the roots of modern America, 297 00:23:24,280 --> 00:23:27,480 to perhaps the most famous American garden of all, 298 00:23:27,480 --> 00:23:32,680 which is the garden of Thomas Jefferson, at Monticello. 299 00:23:36,440 --> 00:23:38,440 Monticello is 100 miles 300 00:23:38,440 --> 00:23:39,880 south-west of Washington, 301 00:23:39,880 --> 00:23:41,960 in Charlottesville, Virginia, 302 00:23:41,960 --> 00:23:44,520 and this grand neo-classical mansion 303 00:23:44,520 --> 00:23:48,160 has become a symbol of nationhood and independence. 304 00:24:00,920 --> 00:24:03,600 Monticello was one of those places 305 00:24:03,600 --> 00:24:08,880 that I knew I absolutely must visit when I came here to the States. 306 00:24:08,880 --> 00:24:13,200 It was created and lived in by Thomas Jefferson, who was an extraordinary man. 307 00:24:13,200 --> 00:24:16,240 He was the third president of the United States, 308 00:24:16,240 --> 00:24:19,600 and the author of the Declaration of Independence. 309 00:24:19,600 --> 00:24:24,760 He was also a great gardener, a horticulturist, a landscaper and architect, 310 00:24:24,760 --> 00:24:28,160 a man with furious curiosity and energy, 311 00:24:28,160 --> 00:24:32,720 and he believed that plants had social significance. 312 00:24:32,720 --> 00:24:35,760 So what we have here at Monticello is not just a garden 313 00:24:35,760 --> 00:24:40,880 but also the founding of modern America. 314 00:24:40,880 --> 00:24:44,240 His energy and curiosity were boundless, 315 00:24:44,240 --> 00:24:47,440 and everything at Monticello is a testament to this. 316 00:24:47,440 --> 00:24:53,160 Jefferson began the Palladian villa in 1767 and worked on it, 317 00:24:53,160 --> 00:24:57,160 designing every quirky detail, for the next 40 years. 318 00:24:57,160 --> 00:25:01,440 This was his home, a sanctuary away from the demands of public life, 319 00:25:01,440 --> 00:25:05,400 but it was also always a place of almost manic work. 320 00:25:05,400 --> 00:25:08,240 He was a polymath, spoke seven languages, 321 00:25:08,240 --> 00:25:13,360 was versed in all the sciences and recorded everything he ever did. 322 00:25:13,360 --> 00:25:17,320 And if that wasn't enough, he was also, like me, 323 00:25:17,320 --> 00:25:19,880 passionate about growing vegetables. 324 00:25:22,440 --> 00:25:27,520 It's been very, very dry, so the garden is quite empty, 325 00:25:27,520 --> 00:25:30,480 but as a vegetable gardener that doesn't matter at all, 326 00:25:30,480 --> 00:25:31,800 it's still fascinating. 327 00:25:31,800 --> 00:25:35,480 It's actually quite wide. It's a hugely long space. 328 00:25:35,480 --> 00:25:42,120 These 24 squares - each of them is about half an allotment. 329 00:25:42,120 --> 00:25:45,440 And as well as this huge vegetable garden terrace, 330 00:25:45,440 --> 00:25:49,000 there's an eight-acre fruit garden and a large floral garden, 331 00:25:49,000 --> 00:25:52,160 which were all part of the original 5,000-acre plantation. 332 00:25:52,160 --> 00:25:57,040 Peter Hatch is the director of gardens and has written several books about Jefferson. 333 00:25:57,040 --> 00:26:02,240 Now, I think it's clear that this wasn't a fancy garden, 334 00:26:02,240 --> 00:26:05,080 where an ex-president pottered out his waning years. 335 00:26:05,080 --> 00:26:07,360 There was a much more serious purpose to it. 336 00:26:07,360 --> 00:26:09,600 I think there was a real profound function 337 00:26:09,600 --> 00:26:13,440 that Jefferson was experimenting in order to sort of transform 338 00:26:13,440 --> 00:26:17,280 the socio and economic culture of this new country he was working on. 339 00:26:17,280 --> 00:26:20,880 I'll just stop you there for a moment because that is 340 00:26:20,880 --> 00:26:24,640 A, an extraordinary statement, it's a really big idea. 341 00:26:24,640 --> 00:26:29,000 Jefferson said the greatest service which can be rendered to any country 342 00:26:29,000 --> 00:26:31,640 is to add a useful plant to its culture, 343 00:26:31,640 --> 00:26:35,360 and a lot of these were kitchen vegetables that he planted 344 00:26:35,360 --> 00:26:38,560 in this kitchen garden that's so remarkable at Monticello. 345 00:26:38,560 --> 00:26:42,120 This was really a revolutionary garden in the way that it contained 346 00:26:42,120 --> 00:26:47,680 330 varieties of 170 species of vegetables, 347 00:26:47,680 --> 00:26:51,040 and he was growing really new things in this garden, 348 00:26:51,040 --> 00:26:54,280 unusual plants that came, literally, from around the world. 349 00:26:54,280 --> 00:26:59,360 330 different varieties of vegetable. That's not necessary. 350 00:26:59,360 --> 00:27:02,880 That's interesting, but it's obsessive, isn't it? 351 00:27:02,880 --> 00:27:05,360 Right. I think he grew 38 varieties of peach, 352 00:27:05,360 --> 00:27:09,880 or 27 varieties of bean, and then would winnow out the inferior types. 353 00:27:09,880 --> 00:27:12,440 - So this was an experimental laboratory. - Right. 354 00:27:14,800 --> 00:27:20,520 Now, here in what one might call the floral part of the garden, 355 00:27:20,520 --> 00:27:25,720 what was Jefferson's thinking and how did it evolve? 356 00:27:25,720 --> 00:27:27,680 He planted all the flowerbeds first, 357 00:27:27,680 --> 00:27:30,200 as he was about to retire from the presidency, 358 00:27:30,200 --> 00:27:32,520 and there were 20 oval flowerbeds. 359 00:27:32,520 --> 00:27:34,880 He planted them and went back to Washington. 360 00:27:34,880 --> 00:27:38,280 His daughter wrote to him and said the bulbs had done splendidly 361 00:27:38,280 --> 00:27:40,240 but none of the seeds had come up. 362 00:27:40,240 --> 00:27:45,080 Despite that temporary setback he said, "I need more room for a greater variety of flowers." 363 00:27:45,080 --> 00:27:47,600 He sketched a plan with a border alongside of it. 364 00:27:47,600 --> 00:27:51,240 One garden writer said Jefferson was like all good gardeners, 365 00:27:51,240 --> 00:27:54,160 when he couldn't successfully garden in a small space, 366 00:27:54,160 --> 00:27:56,600 he just decided to make it three times larger. 367 00:27:56,600 --> 00:27:57,880 It's exactly the truth! 368 00:28:03,640 --> 00:28:06,480 In its day, Monticello was a frontier garden. 369 00:28:06,480 --> 00:28:11,440 To its west lay largely undiscovered land for Europeans. 370 00:28:11,440 --> 00:28:15,120 But for the man who wrote that, "All men are created equal", 371 00:28:15,120 --> 00:28:19,080 Jefferson's Monticello enshrined the deepest of American dilemmas. 372 00:28:20,160 --> 00:28:23,400 All the way along this mulberry avenue were buildings, 373 00:28:23,400 --> 00:28:27,720 and in those buildings, all the needs of the estate were serviced, 374 00:28:27,720 --> 00:28:33,560 from making nails to splitting wood, and also lived slaves. 375 00:28:33,560 --> 00:28:38,680 Now, there were about 100 slaves working here at Monticello, 376 00:28:38,680 --> 00:28:43,760 which, for the man who wrote the Declaration of Independence, 377 00:28:43,760 --> 00:28:46,120 is confusing to the modern mind. 378 00:28:48,520 --> 00:28:55,240 Slaves were a largely accepted element of 18th and 19th-century life in the American south, 379 00:28:55,240 --> 00:29:00,920 and although Jefferson wrote and spoke against the evils of slavery, 380 00:29:00,920 --> 00:29:05,840 the bald fact remains that Monticello depended upon slave labour 381 00:29:05,840 --> 00:29:08,280 for its creation and maintenance. 382 00:29:10,480 --> 00:29:17,400 This is a beautifully-restored and maintained late-18th century garden, 383 00:29:17,400 --> 00:29:21,200 set in the glorious Virginia countryside and, as such, is worth a visit. 384 00:29:21,200 --> 00:29:27,200 But what makes it really special is the extraordinary man that made it. 385 00:29:27,200 --> 00:29:30,880 There's still something slightly austere about Jefferson, 386 00:29:30,880 --> 00:29:33,640 something almost ruthless at the heart of it. 387 00:29:33,640 --> 00:29:38,400 Again, I suspect that's to do with being a successful politician. 388 00:29:38,400 --> 00:29:43,760 But what it did do in its age was to inspire people 389 00:29:43,760 --> 00:29:48,360 to go out and conquer what they saw as wilderness, 390 00:29:48,360 --> 00:29:54,880 and set up a series of settlements, increasingly further west. 391 00:29:56,400 --> 00:29:59,640 So now I'm going in the footsteps of those early settlers, 392 00:29:59,640 --> 00:30:03,000 as they struck out westwards into what is now called Kansas. 393 00:30:04,840 --> 00:30:08,240 Kansas takes its name from the Kansa tribe, 394 00:30:08,240 --> 00:30:11,120 who inhabited the area long before Europeans arrived, 395 00:30:11,120 --> 00:30:15,520 and for thousands of years native Americans had lived in this stunning landscape. 396 00:30:15,520 --> 00:30:20,840 However, as the emerging nation expanded into the prairies of the mid-west, 397 00:30:20,840 --> 00:30:23,400 their way of life would be changed forever. 398 00:30:25,680 --> 00:30:30,800 Jefferson encouraged and sponsored the exploration of the west, 399 00:30:30,800 --> 00:30:33,480 and following this were settlers, 400 00:30:33,480 --> 00:30:37,320 forever moving inexorably westward looking for more land, 401 00:30:37,320 --> 00:30:40,040 and there was, seemingly, a limitless amount of it. 402 00:30:40,040 --> 00:30:43,080 And they came to the prairies, 403 00:30:43,080 --> 00:30:47,200 thousands of square miles of rolling grass. 404 00:30:48,720 --> 00:30:54,920 These vast grasslands once stretched unbroken for hundreds of miles across the continent's interior, 405 00:30:54,920 --> 00:30:58,640 and when this landscape was first seen by the French explorers, 406 00:30:58,640 --> 00:31:03,280 they called the sea of grass "prairie", the French term for "meadow". 407 00:31:04,480 --> 00:31:08,320 Seeing this trail wind through the grasses, 408 00:31:08,320 --> 00:31:10,880 you see exactly the inspiration 409 00:31:10,880 --> 00:31:15,200 that James van Sweden has taken and used in his garden. 410 00:31:18,520 --> 00:31:22,480 Native Americans lived harmoniously with this landscape, 411 00:31:22,480 --> 00:31:26,120 and the ecosystem was sustained by a cycle of natural fires 412 00:31:26,120 --> 00:31:29,080 and the grazing by tens of thousands of wild buffalo. 413 00:31:29,080 --> 00:31:32,760 Today, the buffalo and the indigenous people have all but gone, 414 00:31:32,760 --> 00:31:35,040 as well as most of the prairie, 415 00:31:35,040 --> 00:31:39,640 but what remains still has to be sensitively managed. 416 00:31:39,640 --> 00:31:44,640 Only 2% of the 19th-century grasslands remain, and two thirds of that is being preserved here, 417 00:31:44,640 --> 00:31:48,240 the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve. 418 00:31:48,240 --> 00:31:52,040 Ron Clark is one of the park rangers. 419 00:31:52,040 --> 00:31:55,880 The prairie can contain about 60 different types of grasses. 420 00:31:55,880 --> 00:31:59,560 We have approximately 40 that we've identified, 421 00:31:59,560 --> 00:32:02,760 but we have four that we consider our signature grasses, 422 00:32:02,760 --> 00:32:07,640 and those, of course, are the two blue stems, big and little, Indian and switchgrass. 423 00:32:07,640 --> 00:32:11,160 The blue grass has these very deep roots, I understand. 424 00:32:11,160 --> 00:32:15,160 Exactly. Most of these grasses root down at least eight feet. 425 00:32:15,160 --> 00:32:18,760 Some of them can go down to 15 or 16 feet. 426 00:32:18,760 --> 00:32:22,400 80% of the plant is actually under your feet. 427 00:32:22,400 --> 00:32:27,680 And the grasses are extraordinarily subtle and beautiful. 428 00:32:27,680 --> 00:32:30,000 They repay you steady, don't they? 429 00:32:30,000 --> 00:32:32,680 I think this is the prettiest time of the year here. 430 00:32:33,640 --> 00:32:35,360 They're just so majestic. 431 00:32:41,760 --> 00:32:44,280 Standing here, the grasses are taller than us. 432 00:32:44,280 --> 00:32:47,200 Yes. The one right behind you is just about your height. 433 00:32:47,200 --> 00:32:49,960 One at the back, that's old big blue stem. 434 00:32:49,960 --> 00:32:55,080 - Right. - And this time of year you really don't see that blue stem colour, mid summer. 435 00:32:55,080 --> 00:32:58,640 This stock has a kind of blueish-green colour to it. 436 00:32:58,640 --> 00:33:00,920 Now, this grass is called turkeyfoot. 437 00:33:00,920 --> 00:33:05,240 It's one of our big four, right here, a big blue stem. 438 00:33:05,240 --> 00:33:08,000 Right in front of us here, I see some Indian grass, 439 00:33:08,000 --> 00:33:12,880 which people who had a good imagination thought looked like the feather of an Indian. 440 00:33:12,880 --> 00:33:19,080 The science community tells us that only the rainforest has a greater diversity than the prairie. 441 00:33:19,080 --> 00:33:24,600 - Really? - That's something that people have a hard time understanding 442 00:33:24,600 --> 00:33:28,480 or even contemplating, because they just see it as a grassland, 443 00:33:28,480 --> 00:33:32,120 that's got a few steers out on it, and a coyote or two, 444 00:33:32,120 --> 00:33:37,040 but, actually, if you spend any time here, every rock has life under it. 445 00:33:37,040 --> 00:33:38,280 Yeah. Yeah. 446 00:33:39,240 --> 00:33:42,840 OK, as we kind of walk down out of the prairie, 447 00:33:42,840 --> 00:33:45,960 you begin to pick up the woody vegetation, trees to our left, 448 00:33:45,960 --> 00:33:49,240 and this beautiful red-leafed plant called sumac. 449 00:33:49,240 --> 00:33:51,000 It's an astonishing colour. 450 00:33:51,000 --> 00:33:53,400 It's an interesting plant. It's very pretty, 451 00:33:53,400 --> 00:33:56,440 - and we like to see it on the prairie. It belongs here. - Yeah. 452 00:34:07,920 --> 00:34:11,280 I'm so glad that I came out here 453 00:34:11,280 --> 00:34:14,040 to the Kansas prairies. 454 00:34:14,040 --> 00:34:18,400 It puts everything into context and takes plants that you can see 455 00:34:18,400 --> 00:34:22,840 and admire in a garden and gives them another dimension. 456 00:34:22,840 --> 00:34:26,200 But the thing that changed this prairie, 457 00:34:26,200 --> 00:34:28,960 it probably changed this country, actually, 458 00:34:28,960 --> 00:34:32,240 more than anything else as it developed, 459 00:34:32,240 --> 00:34:33,760 was the railroad. 460 00:34:36,280 --> 00:34:40,960 The final leg of my journey is on to the west coast and California. 461 00:34:44,800 --> 00:34:48,560 Modern transport is dominated by the aeroplane and the motor car, 462 00:34:48,560 --> 00:34:52,880 but in the pioneer days it was the railroad that truly opened up the west. 463 00:34:55,560 --> 00:34:58,680 Henry Huntingdon was a railroad magnate, 464 00:34:58,680 --> 00:35:01,240 and he used the vast wealth that he accrued 465 00:35:01,240 --> 00:35:06,040 to finance his collections of manuscripts, paintings, rare books and plants. 466 00:35:07,840 --> 00:35:11,640 In 1904, he met a talented gardener named William Hertrich, 467 00:35:11,640 --> 00:35:15,240 whom he charged to build the most beautiful garden in California. 468 00:35:15,240 --> 00:35:18,480 The result is the Huntingdon Botanical Gardens. 469 00:35:23,120 --> 00:35:27,120 The thing that has drawn me here, first of all in California, 470 00:35:27,120 --> 00:35:31,840 is because it seems to me an extraordinary thing that Huntingdon, 471 00:35:31,840 --> 00:35:36,200 who had so much power, who blazed a trail into California, 472 00:35:36,200 --> 00:35:41,000 who loved California, decided to build a garden as his memorial. 473 00:35:44,080 --> 00:35:47,680 He didn't just build any old garden, he built a garden on a grand scale, 474 00:35:47,720 --> 00:35:51,840 bearing in mind California was only part of the US from 1850 onwards. 475 00:35:51,840 --> 00:35:57,880 So it was an amazingly optimistic, grand gesture. 476 00:36:03,520 --> 00:36:08,920 Huntingdon's Botanic Garden covers 127 acres, 477 00:36:08,920 --> 00:36:12,960 with over 15,000 species of plants divided amongst 12 themed areas. 478 00:36:12,960 --> 00:36:15,680 The desert garden is 100 years old, 479 00:36:15,680 --> 00:36:19,400 and one of the oldest collections of cacti and succulents in the world. 480 00:36:21,960 --> 00:36:23,480 Mmm. 481 00:36:25,160 --> 00:36:28,800 Many of these cacti are night blooming. 482 00:36:28,800 --> 00:36:33,520 So this wonderful, extraordinary flower is only open now 483 00:36:33,520 --> 00:36:36,280 because it's rather a grey, chilly morning, 484 00:36:36,280 --> 00:36:39,680 and, for once, I'm glad that the sun is slow to come out 485 00:36:39,680 --> 00:36:42,440 because when it gets sunny, which it will do later on, 486 00:36:42,440 --> 00:36:44,000 that will just close up. 487 00:36:47,440 --> 00:36:49,320 But I confess that these are plants 488 00:36:49,320 --> 00:36:52,440 as far from my own familiar botanical terms of reference 489 00:36:52,440 --> 00:36:54,560 as anything found outside a coral reef 490 00:36:54,560 --> 00:36:57,840 and to help me find out more about the garden and its plants, 491 00:36:57,840 --> 00:36:59,240 I met up with Jim Folsam, 492 00:36:59,240 --> 00:37:02,600 who's been director of gardens here for the past 23 years. 493 00:37:04,320 --> 00:37:08,320 I'm intrigued that the place existed at all. 494 00:37:08,320 --> 00:37:12,360 What did Huntingdon expect people to get out of this? 495 00:37:12,360 --> 00:37:13,880 What was the purpose? 496 00:37:13,880 --> 00:37:17,840 One of the things that we've lost, "we" in the broader sense, 497 00:37:17,840 --> 00:37:20,320 is a feeling that an earlier generation had 498 00:37:20,320 --> 00:37:22,040 that plants were important, 499 00:37:22,040 --> 00:37:25,960 and that plants were almost important from an imperial sense, 500 00:37:25,960 --> 00:37:29,280 and he felt that this was the new world, southern California. 501 00:37:29,280 --> 00:37:33,840 If you could grow anything here, then you could be anybody, couldn't you? 502 00:37:33,840 --> 00:37:37,520 The collections were an expression of what southern California can do. 503 00:37:37,520 --> 00:37:41,480 You can grow all these plants, so you can do something wonderful, can't you? 504 00:37:43,440 --> 00:37:47,000 It's partly, as you say, a sort of imperial statement. 505 00:37:47,000 --> 00:37:52,160 It's partly an expression of sort of energetic optimism. 506 00:37:52,160 --> 00:37:54,440 An understanding modern society has lost, 507 00:37:54,440 --> 00:37:56,920 the understanding that plants are important. 508 00:38:00,520 --> 00:38:03,960 Now, that looks, to me, terribly like a London plane, 509 00:38:03,960 --> 00:38:08,600 and yet I can't imagine what you would want with a London plane tree in this environment. 510 00:38:08,600 --> 00:38:15,320 Well, of course it's the more rugged, western cousin, of the hybrid regimented London plane, 511 00:38:15,320 --> 00:38:17,680 and this is the way the tree looks in nature. 512 00:38:17,680 --> 00:38:21,840 This is one of the few trees that was on the property when Huntingdon bought it. 513 00:38:21,840 --> 00:38:24,920 It still looks incongruous to me, I have to say! 514 00:38:24,920 --> 00:38:26,720 It looks perfectly natural here! 515 00:38:34,600 --> 00:38:37,720 If you understand how your garden works, 516 00:38:37,720 --> 00:38:41,400 you have gained a lot of understanding in science and culture 517 00:38:41,400 --> 00:38:44,720 and a lot of understanding in just practical matters. 518 00:38:44,720 --> 00:38:49,520 So, we hope that what we can do is we can cause people 519 00:38:49,520 --> 00:38:53,760 to love to learn more about the world around them through their garden. 520 00:39:03,040 --> 00:39:06,520 I confess that I'm feeling pretty shattered. 521 00:39:06,520 --> 00:39:13,600 To try and take in ten acres of succulent plants that you're not very familiar with, 522 00:39:13,600 --> 00:39:19,600 and that's less than one tenth of the whole Huntingdon estate, is exhausting. 523 00:39:19,600 --> 00:39:25,640 But it's a great way to be introduced to California and its gardens. 524 00:39:25,640 --> 00:39:29,600 It's a vast place, and the one message that comes through this 525 00:39:29,600 --> 00:39:35,480 is the sense that the weather, and the land, and the general atmosphere, 526 00:39:35,480 --> 00:39:38,840 the sense of possibilities here, are limitless. 527 00:39:38,840 --> 00:39:44,280 And all that optimism, combined with the marvellous weather, 528 00:39:44,280 --> 00:39:46,800 is really what drew the movie business here, 529 00:39:46,800 --> 00:39:48,600 just after the First World War. 530 00:39:48,600 --> 00:39:53,920 The next garden I want to go and see is one made by an entertainer. 531 00:39:59,960 --> 00:40:03,200 The 1920s and '30s were the golden age of cinema in California. 532 00:40:03,200 --> 00:40:06,240 Movie moguls and Hollywood stars built palatial homes 533 00:40:06,240 --> 00:40:09,400 with suitably luxuriant gardens. 534 00:40:09,400 --> 00:40:12,480 It was a time of extravagance and glamour, a period when 535 00:40:12,480 --> 00:40:16,520 celebrities would flaunt their wealth through their gardens. 536 00:40:25,880 --> 00:40:29,360 I've come here to Lotusland in Santa Barbara 537 00:40:29,360 --> 00:40:31,560 because it is one of the very few gardens 538 00:40:31,560 --> 00:40:34,480 that survived from the heyday of Hollywood. 539 00:40:34,480 --> 00:40:39,440 And what we see now is down to one extraordinary woman, 540 00:40:39,440 --> 00:40:41,600 called Madame Ganna Walska. 541 00:40:45,200 --> 00:40:49,280 Ganna Walska was a Polish opera diva who married six times, 542 00:40:49,280 --> 00:40:52,000 obviously wisely, if not successfully, 543 00:40:52,000 --> 00:40:55,000 because she accumulated great wealth in the process. 544 00:40:55,000 --> 00:40:59,600 She bought the property in 1941 and immediately began to renovate its grounds. 545 00:40:59,600 --> 00:41:03,400 And today, Lotusland is 37-acre estate 546 00:41:03,400 --> 00:41:05,720 made up of over 20 idiosyncratic gardens, 547 00:41:05,720 --> 00:41:09,880 and it's become famous for its botanical diversity and richness. 548 00:41:12,440 --> 00:41:15,040 A-ha. 549 00:41:15,040 --> 00:41:19,440 Now, I've read that this used to be the original swimming pool 550 00:41:19,440 --> 00:41:25,560 and it's been created into a series of ponds, not least to house the lotus, 551 00:41:25,560 --> 00:41:28,080 which gives the garden its name, Lotusland. 552 00:41:33,760 --> 00:41:36,400 The blue garden was one of the first of its kind 553 00:41:36,400 --> 00:41:39,080 and created almost entirely without flowers, 554 00:41:39,080 --> 00:41:43,600 and its weave of glaucous foliage, all intermeshes subtly, 555 00:41:43,600 --> 00:41:46,080 set against a very yellow-green backdrop, 556 00:41:46,080 --> 00:41:50,120 and it's one of a whole series of individual gardens, 557 00:41:50,120 --> 00:41:52,320 each which has its own theme. 558 00:41:54,360 --> 00:41:58,880 It's not just the physical scale of this garden. 559 00:41:58,880 --> 00:42:02,040 Whether you like it or not, it's this mix. 560 00:42:02,040 --> 00:42:05,840 Here am I, looking out on sort of a bit of Islamic garden 561 00:42:05,840 --> 00:42:07,880 and a bit of Italianate garden, 562 00:42:07,880 --> 00:42:10,840 and then there's a zoo or something in topiary down there. 563 00:42:10,840 --> 00:42:12,760 Now, I actually really like it. 564 00:42:12,760 --> 00:42:16,400 I like the kitschness, I like the sort of way it's all pulled together 565 00:42:16,400 --> 00:42:20,200 in this quirky jingle-jangle of plants 566 00:42:20,200 --> 00:42:23,400 because underneath that is a really assured performance, 567 00:42:23,400 --> 00:42:27,120 as if someone's saying, "We're putting on a show and we're good at it. 568 00:42:27,120 --> 00:42:29,920 "Stand back because you're going to be amazed." 569 00:42:35,760 --> 00:42:38,680 But I'm curious to find out how a singing diva 570 00:42:38,680 --> 00:42:42,520 came to create such an array of gardens on such a scale. 571 00:42:42,520 --> 00:42:46,400 Ganna Walska's niece, Hania, grew up at Lotusland, 572 00:42:46,400 --> 00:42:48,680 and her first wedding took place here, too. 573 00:42:48,680 --> 00:42:51,760 What was it like growing up in this extraordinary garden? 574 00:42:51,760 --> 00:42:54,280 Well, my friends, who I would invite for a swim, 575 00:42:54,280 --> 00:42:59,120 were always kind of shy when they walked in here, 576 00:42:59,120 --> 00:43:02,840 and it was kind of overwhelming for my teenage friends 577 00:43:02,840 --> 00:43:04,720 when I would have a party here. 578 00:43:04,720 --> 00:43:06,600 They were quite overwhelmed. 579 00:43:06,600 --> 00:43:08,760 What was your aunt like as a person? 580 00:43:08,760 --> 00:43:10,360 It's hard to describe my aunt. 581 00:43:10,360 --> 00:43:12,240 She'd sort of the life of the party. 582 00:43:12,240 --> 00:43:15,320 Let's put it this way, when she walked in, everybody knew. 583 00:43:15,320 --> 00:43:19,000 I don't know why but they all stopped talking when she walked in, 584 00:43:19,000 --> 00:43:21,480 and she was such a strong personality. 585 00:43:21,480 --> 00:43:23,720 And it was extraordinary back then 586 00:43:23,720 --> 00:43:28,200 that somebody like her should become so involved in gardening 587 00:43:28,200 --> 00:43:31,640 because she became effectively the head gardener, didn't she? 588 00:43:31,640 --> 00:43:33,040 Yes, she did, actually. 589 00:43:33,040 --> 00:43:36,160 No-one was allowed to touch anything, or move anything, 590 00:43:36,160 --> 00:43:41,200 or plant anything, or cut anything without her specific permission. 591 00:43:41,200 --> 00:43:46,880 If it was a question of planting, she'd say, "Dig a hole, then wait." 592 00:43:46,880 --> 00:43:49,240 Then she'd walk around the garden. 593 00:43:49,240 --> 00:43:53,000 Two hours later she'd come back, the gardener's standing over the hole, 594 00:43:53,000 --> 00:43:57,280 and she'll say, "All right, now put the plant in and I'll come back and look." 595 00:43:57,280 --> 00:44:01,320 So, she puts the plant in the hole, then she'll come back an hour later 596 00:44:01,320 --> 00:44:05,280 and she says, "No. More to the left. I'll be back." 597 00:44:12,240 --> 00:44:18,520 I think, perhaps more than any other garden, this is specifically hers 598 00:44:18,520 --> 00:44:22,080 because other gardeners may have landscape designers, you know, 599 00:44:22,080 --> 00:44:24,240 and she did, 600 00:44:24,240 --> 00:44:27,200 but she wouldn't take their word for it! 601 00:44:27,200 --> 00:44:31,840 She would get their plans, and then she would change them! 602 00:44:33,440 --> 00:44:38,080 I think I'm beginning to understand how Madame Walska got through her six husbands. 603 00:44:38,080 --> 00:44:40,880 But there's no question that her approach has led to 604 00:44:40,880 --> 00:44:44,080 a very individual garden, and that's always good. 605 00:44:49,120 --> 00:44:51,960 Now this is very weird, 606 00:44:51,960 --> 00:44:55,400 although I like that lion, with his shaggy mane. 607 00:44:55,400 --> 00:45:00,800 Here we have a set of slightly Disneyfied animals, topiary, 608 00:45:00,800 --> 00:45:03,960 and this enormous clock in the middle. 609 00:45:06,680 --> 00:45:11,720 I think this is Madame having fun, and she did everything big. 610 00:45:11,720 --> 00:45:15,240 So if she's going to do tacky, do it big. 611 00:45:26,880 --> 00:45:28,680 This is the aloe garden, 612 00:45:28,680 --> 00:45:32,480 with a large collection of aloes. 613 00:45:32,480 --> 00:45:38,640 But it is centred around, and dominated by, 614 00:45:38,640 --> 00:45:44,760 a pool of such monstrous hideosity 615 00:45:44,760 --> 00:45:49,120 that it's hard to see the plants for what they are, which is fascinating. 616 00:45:50,640 --> 00:45:52,600 But it's interesting. 617 00:46:01,480 --> 00:46:03,080 I'm amazed. 618 00:46:16,920 --> 00:46:20,680 Here we have a garden where money seems to be no object, 619 00:46:20,680 --> 00:46:23,160 where ambition doesn't stop anything, 620 00:46:23,160 --> 00:46:26,880 where everything is unfettered, including taste. 621 00:46:26,880 --> 00:46:32,680 And that is a real picture of America and its optimism and energy 622 00:46:32,680 --> 00:46:35,440 in the '40s and '50s and '60s. 623 00:46:35,440 --> 00:46:38,760 And I think the next step, whilst I'm here in California, 624 00:46:38,760 --> 00:46:44,440 is to see what people are doing with their money and energy in the modern day. 625 00:46:51,280 --> 00:46:53,560 The movies are still the driving force 626 00:46:53,560 --> 00:46:56,440 behind the cultural and economic life of California, 627 00:46:56,440 --> 00:46:59,680 and the next garden I'm going to see belongs to the director 628 00:46:59,680 --> 00:47:02,160 who made the huge Hollywood blockbusters, 629 00:47:02,160 --> 00:47:05,320 Independence Day, The Patriot and Stargate. 630 00:47:05,320 --> 00:47:08,200 I'm fascinated to see what he's done with his garden. 631 00:47:13,960 --> 00:47:20,920 Here, right in Hollywood, we have the homes of the rich and the powerful in the movie business. 632 00:47:20,920 --> 00:47:23,800 Next door is the house and garden of Dame Helen Mirren, 633 00:47:23,800 --> 00:47:27,440 and this one belongs to the director, Roland Emmerich. 634 00:47:27,440 --> 00:47:30,920 But when he bought it, it was actually very destitute and rundown, 635 00:47:30,920 --> 00:47:33,080 so he was going to revamp the whole thing, 636 00:47:33,080 --> 00:47:36,960 and he hired a garden designer and gave her very specific instructions. 637 00:47:36,960 --> 00:47:43,720 He said he wanted her to create something that evoked the glamour of a 1920s starlet. 638 00:47:43,720 --> 00:47:48,760 He wanted a garden that was exotic and other-worldly. 639 00:48:02,480 --> 00:48:05,560 Compared to Lotusland, this is a relatively small garden. 640 00:48:05,560 --> 00:48:07,480 It's only a couple of acres. 641 00:48:07,480 --> 00:48:11,000 But actually everything about it is on a colossal scale. 642 00:48:11,000 --> 00:48:14,440 Apparently it needed an enormous crane to bring in 643 00:48:14,440 --> 00:48:18,200 these enormous trees, and the expenditure matches it. 644 00:48:18,200 --> 00:48:21,280 The initial flush of pots set them back 100,000, 645 00:48:21,280 --> 00:48:22,640 and then they got more. 646 00:48:22,640 --> 00:48:27,800 The total cost of the garden came to round about 3 million. 647 00:48:31,280 --> 00:48:36,920 Now, another aspect of the brief was that Roland wanted the view blocked because he didn't like it, 648 00:48:36,920 --> 00:48:39,760 and he also wanted to make sure people couldn't look in, 649 00:48:39,760 --> 00:48:41,400 so he had complete privacy, 650 00:48:41,400 --> 00:48:46,360 not least from the paparazzi, as film stars often come and stay here. 651 00:48:46,360 --> 00:48:48,800 And he wanted that NOW. 652 00:48:48,800 --> 00:48:51,720 He wanted his mature garden as quickly as possible. 653 00:48:51,720 --> 00:48:54,080 Well, of course, the only way you can do that 654 00:48:54,080 --> 00:48:57,600 is by buying in enormous trees, which they've done. 655 00:48:57,600 --> 00:49:01,840 So, money, power and the positive thinking 656 00:49:01,840 --> 00:49:06,400 can create an extraordinary garden like that. 657 00:49:12,600 --> 00:49:15,720 The garden is designed around a central stairway 658 00:49:15,720 --> 00:49:17,440 that leads from the front door, 659 00:49:17,880 --> 00:49:20,960 right the way down through the middle of the garden, 660 00:49:20,960 --> 00:49:25,920 to the pool, the archetypal Hollywood swimming pool. 661 00:49:25,920 --> 00:49:30,600 Now, I confess that I came here prepared to mock. 662 00:49:30,600 --> 00:49:34,800 I somehow couldn't believe that all that I'd heard about this garden, 663 00:49:34,800 --> 00:49:38,280 the energy, the desire to have it completed fast, 664 00:49:38,280 --> 00:49:40,440 the money that it cost, 665 00:49:40,440 --> 00:49:45,080 could result in anything that wasn't a bit brash, a bit vulgar. 666 00:49:45,080 --> 00:49:48,680 But, actually, I was completely wrong. 667 00:49:48,680 --> 00:49:50,200 It's fantastic. 668 00:50:08,680 --> 00:50:12,120 When you consider the brief of this garden, to make something that 669 00:50:12,120 --> 00:50:17,280 evoked a glamorous 1920s starlet, something exotic and other worldly, 670 00:50:17,280 --> 00:50:20,680 the designer could have been forgiven for chucking colour at it. 671 00:50:20,680 --> 00:50:22,680 Actually it's much more restrained. 672 00:50:22,680 --> 00:50:27,200 It's all gradations of green, and what that gives it, 673 00:50:27,200 --> 00:50:29,800 other than a sense of great peacefulness, 674 00:50:29,800 --> 00:50:32,480 is substance, almost dignity. 675 00:50:32,480 --> 00:50:36,160 And instead of being blousy with colour, 676 00:50:36,160 --> 00:50:38,760 the few dots of brilliant flowers are like jewels, 677 00:50:38,760 --> 00:50:43,080 jewels against the starlet's beautifully-cut frock. 678 00:50:59,360 --> 00:51:01,320 I've really enjoyed this garden. 679 00:51:01,320 --> 00:51:04,680 I like almost everything about it, and I particularly like 680 00:51:04,680 --> 00:51:10,000 the way that it uses restraint, combined with confidence. 681 00:51:10,000 --> 00:51:12,360 Now, it's not a gardener's garden. 682 00:51:12,360 --> 00:51:15,040 There's nothing to do and there's no sense of it 683 00:51:15,040 --> 00:51:18,800 growing and being nurtured by an individual hand. 684 00:51:18,800 --> 00:51:22,360 But it's a performance, like everything here in Hollywood, 685 00:51:22,360 --> 00:51:25,640 and I think the most appropriate response is just to applaud. 686 00:51:25,640 --> 00:51:30,120 However, when I left Lotusland I said I wanted to see what was going on now, 687 00:51:30,120 --> 00:51:33,480 and this garden draws a lot of its inspiration from the past. 688 00:51:33,480 --> 00:51:36,160 There is a sort of retrospective feel about it, 689 00:51:36,160 --> 00:51:37,720 and before I leave Hollywood, 690 00:51:37,720 --> 00:51:40,240 I want to see something truly modern, 691 00:51:40,240 --> 00:51:43,840 to see what people are looking forward to. 692 00:51:49,240 --> 00:51:51,680 I'm off to Brentwood in the west of the city, 693 00:51:51,680 --> 00:51:53,720 one of LA's most affluent suburbs, 694 00:51:53,720 --> 00:51:57,760 to visit a garden that represents a dramatic break with the past. 695 00:51:57,760 --> 00:52:02,840 The owners of this house and garden, the Greenbergs, having reached retirement age, 696 00:52:02,840 --> 00:52:07,840 decided to start all over again and pull down the home they'd raised their family in 697 00:52:07,840 --> 00:52:11,280 and rebuild a new, very modern house, literally in its place. 698 00:52:20,320 --> 00:52:24,240 Walking in here I'm immediately struck by the great slabs 699 00:52:24,240 --> 00:52:27,760 of colour on the surfaces and the build up of shapes, 700 00:52:27,760 --> 00:52:31,280 and these fantastic palms! 701 00:52:50,040 --> 00:52:52,640 I find it an extraordinary notion 702 00:52:52,640 --> 00:52:57,600 that on this site was the family home where the children grew up, 703 00:52:57,600 --> 00:53:00,160 with all the memories and associations, 704 00:53:00,160 --> 00:53:05,240 and yet it was felt an exciting thing to do 705 00:53:05,240 --> 00:53:10,480 to scrub it all away and reinvent themselves, to build something new. 706 00:53:10,480 --> 00:53:13,680 And that kind of optimism and bravery 707 00:53:13,680 --> 00:53:16,520 seems to me to be very Californian. 708 00:53:25,800 --> 00:53:28,840 This boldness of vision led the owners to collaborate 709 00:53:28,920 --> 00:53:31,720 with the Mexican architect Ricardo Legorreta. 710 00:53:31,720 --> 00:53:36,160 He's famous for using elements of Mexican regional architecture in his work, 711 00:53:36,160 --> 00:53:39,360 including bright colours and plays of light and shadow. 712 00:53:39,360 --> 00:53:45,080 The wonderful garden, however, is the work of the landscape architect Mia Lehrer. 713 00:53:45,080 --> 00:53:48,560 It was a wonderful sort of 714 00:53:48,560 --> 00:53:51,840 experience working with Mr Legorreta, 715 00:53:51,840 --> 00:53:53,640 and working with the Greenbergs. 716 00:53:53,640 --> 00:53:58,160 They really responded to the notion that the garden 717 00:53:58,160 --> 00:54:04,320 and the house had to have sort of an equal billing, so to speak. 718 00:54:06,120 --> 00:54:12,080 Some of my gardens, and especially this one, was relatively instant. 719 00:54:12,080 --> 00:54:15,680 The fact that you can roll out a lawn, 720 00:54:15,680 --> 00:54:21,680 you know, and actually, to a degree, Hollywood plays a part in this. 721 00:54:21,680 --> 00:54:25,800 You know, the instant gardens that need to be created 722 00:54:25,800 --> 00:54:30,080 for drama, film and TV 723 00:54:30,080 --> 00:54:34,200 have become sort of an expectation in my world, 724 00:54:34,200 --> 00:54:37,480 for a certain level of client. 725 00:54:53,720 --> 00:55:00,480 - All the trees around the house were actually saved from the original property. - Really? 726 00:55:00,480 --> 00:55:04,760 It occurred to me that we could bank, so to speak, 727 00:55:04,760 --> 00:55:10,000 the large existing specimen trees and work with them, 728 00:55:10,000 --> 00:55:13,280 and that that would be a wonderful way of bringing 729 00:55:13,280 --> 00:55:18,680 what was part of the original family place back 730 00:55:18,680 --> 00:55:22,480 and integrate that into the garden. 731 00:55:22,480 --> 00:55:27,720 We had these two beautiful jacaranda trees, in this courtyard. 732 00:55:27,720 --> 00:55:33,480 We had the scattering of Washingtonia palms throughout the site, 733 00:55:33,480 --> 00:55:38,680 and we decided to plant them before the house was built. 734 00:55:38,680 --> 00:55:42,200 So literally locate them, with a surveyor, 735 00:55:42,200 --> 00:55:47,360 in their location on the plan and then build the house around it. 736 00:55:50,360 --> 00:55:55,040 I think one of the ultimate compliments I ever got was when 737 00:55:55,040 --> 00:56:00,200 Mr Legorreta walked around the house after it was done and we had a party, 738 00:56:00,200 --> 00:56:05,920 and he said, "You know, this is a garden with a house, 739 00:56:05,920 --> 00:56:08,200 "not a house with a garden." 740 00:56:29,480 --> 00:56:31,760 This is the best place to see the garden. 741 00:56:31,760 --> 00:56:36,000 It looks absolutely fantastic from here, and, significantly, 742 00:56:36,000 --> 00:56:40,000 the best place to see it from is the swimming pool. 743 00:56:40,000 --> 00:56:43,000 Swimming pools are right at the heart of 744 00:56:43,000 --> 00:56:45,760 the whole Californian lifestyle, really, 745 00:56:45,760 --> 00:56:47,440 certainly of homes and gardens. 746 00:56:53,960 --> 00:56:56,400 And the very European idea of garden rooms, 747 00:56:56,400 --> 00:56:58,960 where you have compartments where you discover 748 00:56:58,960 --> 00:57:02,200 separate sections of the garden, is totally absent from here. 749 00:57:02,200 --> 00:57:07,560 The whole thing is open, open to the eye and, above all, open to the sun. 750 00:57:07,560 --> 00:57:11,120 And yet it works together with its various sections 751 00:57:11,120 --> 00:57:14,000 in a very balanced, harmonious way. 752 00:57:14,000 --> 00:57:17,280 The thing I most like about this garden 753 00:57:17,280 --> 00:57:19,640 is not actually just the physical layout, 754 00:57:19,640 --> 00:57:22,680 which I think is beautiful, but it's the spirit behind it. 755 00:57:22,680 --> 00:57:28,800 It seems to me this garden represents that very Californian spirit, 756 00:57:28,800 --> 00:57:33,480 that if you've got the energy, the optimism and the money, 757 00:57:33,480 --> 00:57:35,800 then you can do anything. 758 00:57:42,520 --> 00:57:45,160 This is the end of my journey across America, 759 00:57:45,160 --> 00:57:47,600 and I've visited some amazing gardens 760 00:57:47,600 --> 00:57:51,400 that reflect the diversity and energy and of its people. 761 00:57:51,400 --> 00:57:55,800 But the truth is that the wider American public are slow to embrace the concept 762 00:57:55,800 --> 00:58:01,440 of tending for their land as part of a sense of personal responsibility and pleasure. 763 00:58:01,440 --> 00:58:04,520 However, there is a movement in America that 764 00:58:04,520 --> 00:58:08,600 is starting to think about issues of sustainability and stewardship, 765 00:58:08,600 --> 00:58:12,960 which can be best expressed through the daily care of a domestic garden. 766 00:58:12,960 --> 00:58:15,040 I think if America got gardening, 767 00:58:15,040 --> 00:58:18,920 this idea of a sort of generous nurturing of the soil 768 00:58:18,920 --> 00:58:22,520 that we'd all benefit from, then that could change the world. 769 00:58:24,320 --> 00:58:28,880 Next time, my journey takes me to the Far East, 770 00:58:28,880 --> 00:58:31,680 where I'll travel through China and then on to Japan, 771 00:58:31,680 --> 00:58:37,080 to uncover the history and meaning of their enigmatic gardens. 772 00:58:43,600 --> 00:58:46,640 Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd 773 00:58:46,640 --> 00:58:49,680 Email subtitling@bbc.co.uk 70744

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