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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,960 --> 00:00:07,240 I believe that a really good way to understand a culture is through its gardens. 2 00:00:07,240 --> 00:00:12,920 This is an extraordinary journey to visit 80 inspiring gardens from all over the world. 3 00:00:12,920 --> 00:00:17,280 Some are very well-known, like the Taj Mahal or the Alhambra. 4 00:00:17,280 --> 00:00:22,360 And I'm also challenging my idea of what a garden actually is. 5 00:00:22,360 --> 00:00:25,440 So I'm visiting gardens that float on the Amazon - 6 00:00:25,440 --> 00:00:27,600 a strange fantasy in the jungle, 7 00:00:27,600 --> 00:00:30,720 as well as the private homes of great designers, 8 00:00:30,720 --> 00:00:33,160 and the desert flowering in a garden. 9 00:00:33,160 --> 00:00:38,360 And wherever I go I shall be meeting people that share my own passion for gardens 10 00:00:38,360 --> 00:00:44,120 on my epic quest to see the world through 80 of its most fascinating and beautiful gardens. 11 00:01:00,600 --> 00:01:03,800 In modern times at least, northern Europe has been the place 12 00:01:03,800 --> 00:01:09,000 where gardens and gardening have been the most vibrant and dynamic. 13 00:01:10,240 --> 00:01:14,280 There are hundreds of historic gardens across the region 14 00:01:14,280 --> 00:01:18,320 that one can visit, and millions of people do just that every year. 15 00:01:18,320 --> 00:01:23,480 There is clearly a common desire to walk through the past via the medium of a garden. 16 00:01:23,480 --> 00:01:26,520 Yet there is an overriding paradox accompanying that. 17 00:01:26,520 --> 00:01:32,320 How do you preserve the history of gardens and yet keep them alive, 18 00:01:32,320 --> 00:01:36,400 and accept the fact that all gardens change all the time. 19 00:01:40,640 --> 00:01:46,600 My journey begins with the quintessential English landscape garden. 20 00:01:46,600 --> 00:01:52,320 It then takes me across the Channel to the grand and sumptuous gardens of France. 21 00:01:52,320 --> 00:01:55,520 I shall then track back to Belgium and the Netherlands, 22 00:01:55,520 --> 00:01:59,880 and the gardens of some of my own personal design heroes. 23 00:01:59,880 --> 00:02:03,800 Finally, I will travel to the far north, beyond the Arctic Circle, 24 00:02:03,800 --> 00:02:08,280 to a garden where for a few summer months, the sun never sets. 25 00:02:09,400 --> 00:02:12,840 The immediate challenge facing this journey 26 00:02:12,840 --> 00:02:17,040 was to whittle the gardens down to an acceptable number. 27 00:02:17,040 --> 00:02:20,880 I mean, I could have chosen 80 gardens, just from northern Europe alone. 28 00:02:20,880 --> 00:02:26,240 So, the way I've resolved that is to make it an entirely personal journey. 29 00:02:26,240 --> 00:02:31,440 The gardens I'm about to visit are either ones that I've been longing to see all my life, 30 00:02:31,440 --> 00:02:34,000 or ones that I've been to before, 31 00:02:34,000 --> 00:02:37,160 I know well and I want to share with you. 32 00:02:40,880 --> 00:02:45,760 I am starting with the only English gardens in my entire round-the-world journey. 33 00:02:45,760 --> 00:02:48,840 I have chosen them because although they are very different, 34 00:02:48,840 --> 00:02:51,920 I think that they represent the very best of British gardens. 35 00:02:51,920 --> 00:02:54,520 In fact, both are amongst the very best in the world. 36 00:02:54,520 --> 00:02:56,320 The first is Rousham in Oxfordshire. 37 00:03:02,160 --> 00:03:04,360 Rousham, designed by William Kent, 38 00:03:04,360 --> 00:03:07,160 is astonishingly little known or visited, 39 00:03:07,160 --> 00:03:10,440 yet I think it's the best landscape garden in the country. 40 00:03:18,880 --> 00:03:22,480 In 1737, Kent, then better known as an architect, 41 00:03:22,480 --> 00:03:26,800 was hired by the owner General Dormer to make modifications 42 00:03:26,800 --> 00:03:29,760 to the house at Rousham and to revamp the garden. 43 00:03:32,520 --> 00:03:36,400 In the drawing room of the house is this plan of the garden. 44 00:03:36,400 --> 00:03:39,440 We don't know who drew it but we know that it was drawn up 45 00:03:39,440 --> 00:03:44,000 round about the time of Kent's death in the 1750s. 46 00:03:44,000 --> 00:03:47,880 And it shows the layout as Kent intended it, 47 00:03:47,880 --> 00:03:52,240 and it also shows it almost exactly as it is today. 48 00:03:52,240 --> 00:03:54,240 It's hardly changed at all. 49 00:03:54,240 --> 00:03:57,200 The head gardener at the time that this was drawn up, McCleary, 50 00:03:57,200 --> 00:04:02,680 used to take people round down here, down this path 51 00:04:02,680 --> 00:04:07,560 and then round, down there and then back up that avenue 52 00:04:07,560 --> 00:04:09,600 and along the bottom. 53 00:04:09,600 --> 00:04:11,960 And that's the route that I'm going to take. 54 00:04:20,600 --> 00:04:25,240 Kent's radical contribution to garden design 55 00:04:25,240 --> 00:04:30,120 was to include the landscape as part of the picture. 56 00:04:30,120 --> 00:04:31,360 Up till then, 57 00:04:31,360 --> 00:04:37,840 gardens had tried to be refuges from what was seen as a potentially hostile world around them. 58 00:04:37,840 --> 00:04:41,240 And here at Rousham, he deliberately sculpted the land 59 00:04:41,240 --> 00:04:45,120 with this beautiful curve down to the river, didn't obscure that. 60 00:04:45,120 --> 00:04:48,920 And then the field and the meadow below and the cattle grazing, 61 00:04:48,920 --> 00:04:50,640 which were meant to be seen. 62 00:04:50,640 --> 00:04:55,480 The road left unobscured so they could see droves of cattle going across. 63 00:04:55,480 --> 00:05:00,120 And then there are two buildings up there - one which was a cottage which he reshaped to look as 64 00:05:00,120 --> 00:05:02,280 though it might just be a castle, 65 00:05:02,280 --> 00:05:05,040 and the eye-catcher on the horizon, totally false. 66 00:05:05,040 --> 00:05:06,480 It's just a wall. 67 00:05:06,480 --> 00:05:08,080 This was revolutionary. 68 00:05:08,080 --> 00:05:12,480 For the first time, a very English rural view was included 69 00:05:12,480 --> 00:05:15,080 as an integral part of the garden. 70 00:05:17,120 --> 00:05:20,480 I find William Kent a fascinating character. 71 00:05:20,480 --> 00:05:22,640 He was certainly no gardener. 72 00:05:22,640 --> 00:05:25,720 We know that he avoided visiting the site as far as he could 73 00:05:25,720 --> 00:05:29,440 and was notoriously careless on details of construction. 74 00:05:29,440 --> 00:05:33,520 He seems to have been a semi-literate, drunken Yorkshireman 75 00:05:33,520 --> 00:05:36,240 with a knack of smoozing the aristocracy. 76 00:05:36,240 --> 00:05:43,360 But I think he was also, on the evidence of his work here and at Stowe, touched with true greatness. 77 00:05:43,360 --> 00:05:49,520 This route takes you through the woods and down here into what is known as the Vale of Venus. 78 00:05:49,520 --> 00:05:53,800 That's obviously a beautiful, beautiful piece of landscaping but, 79 00:05:53,800 --> 00:06:00,080 for Kent, it was much, much more than that because it's full of allegories and references. 80 00:06:00,080 --> 00:06:03,320 Some of them architectural, like the shape of the cascade 81 00:06:03,320 --> 00:06:08,840 which had Italian references that only people who'd been on the Grand Tour would have known. 82 00:06:08,840 --> 00:06:13,600 And there's Venus herself, who is the Goddess of Gardens. 83 00:06:13,600 --> 00:06:17,800 And the few hundred people that would have come here 84 00:06:17,800 --> 00:06:20,960 would have known all that, they would have understood it. 85 00:06:20,960 --> 00:06:24,840 It was a sort of kind of theme park, in the way that we go and we know about Disney, 86 00:06:24,840 --> 00:06:27,040 we know about the films and we pick up the references. 87 00:06:27,040 --> 00:06:29,640 And, of course, for most people now, there's none of that. 88 00:06:29,640 --> 00:06:33,080 It doesn't mean anything beyond its beauty. 89 00:06:33,080 --> 00:06:35,600 Now I think that's fine, I think the beauty is enough. 90 00:06:35,600 --> 00:06:40,480 But there is one extra bonus that we get that they don't and of course that's the maturity. 91 00:06:49,320 --> 00:06:54,400 Now, I think, on a rainy overcast day in June, 92 00:06:54,400 --> 00:07:00,160 this is as beautiful as practically anything I've ever seen in the world. 93 00:07:00,160 --> 00:07:03,920 And a complete genius to take water and formalise it, 94 00:07:03,920 --> 00:07:09,920 and yet keep it sinuous, with the understory of the laurel and the box clipped, 95 00:07:09,920 --> 00:07:13,400 but massive in conception and in scale. 96 00:07:13,400 --> 00:07:16,840 The balance, the light, the simplicity. 97 00:07:16,840 --> 00:07:21,360 Made in 1740, and I tell you it's as modern as anything I've seen. 98 00:07:22,960 --> 00:07:26,480 Some of the layout of Rousham can be credited to Kent's contemporary, 99 00:07:26,480 --> 00:07:30,480 the Royal gardener, Charles Bridgeman, 100 00:07:30,480 --> 00:07:33,800 who laid out designs here some 20 years earlier. 101 00:07:33,800 --> 00:07:38,680 In Bridgeman's design, this natural stream was allowed to run free. 102 00:07:38,680 --> 00:07:41,240 But it was Kent's inspiration to formalise it, 103 00:07:41,240 --> 00:07:43,200 and to add the octagonal cold bath. 104 00:07:43,200 --> 00:07:48,880 And, like much in this garden, Kent's brilliance was to stimulate the senses as well as the mind. 105 00:07:57,680 --> 00:08:04,320 What this garden has, more than any other garden I've ever seen, 106 00:08:04,320 --> 00:08:07,680 is a sort of perfect greenness. 107 00:08:07,680 --> 00:08:12,040 The use of green and the layers of it, and the layers of light 108 00:08:12,040 --> 00:08:16,160 that filter through the green, is just sublime. 109 00:08:44,720 --> 00:08:49,400 Now this arcade of the Temple of Prinesti, as Kent called it, 110 00:08:49,400 --> 00:08:51,160 has alcoves and niches, 111 00:08:51,160 --> 00:08:57,280 and originally there was a statue in each of the niches, and a seat in each of these alcoves. 112 00:08:57,280 --> 00:09:04,720 The idea being, of course, that the visitor could sit and take in yet another fabulous view. 113 00:09:04,720 --> 00:09:10,080 And what you get from all these views, and in fact all these scenes, is that it's a theatre. 114 00:09:10,080 --> 00:09:15,000 The garden is like a stage set waiting for the actors to come. 115 00:09:15,000 --> 00:09:18,720 And, of course, you the visitor are the actors, 116 00:09:18,720 --> 00:09:22,320 and then the whole thing suddenly becomes alive and is made complete. 117 00:09:28,080 --> 00:09:32,480 Rousham is my favourite garden in England, 118 00:09:32,480 --> 00:09:36,760 and this visit has reinforced 119 00:09:36,760 --> 00:09:40,080 the fact that it is a staggering work. 120 00:09:40,080 --> 00:09:42,640 I think Kent was a genius, a true genius 121 00:09:42,640 --> 00:09:45,280 and he's right at the top of his art here, 122 00:09:45,280 --> 00:09:49,440 and it makes it one of the great gardens of the world. 123 00:09:49,440 --> 00:09:54,640 And he uses practically just one colour and some very simple ideas, 124 00:09:54,640 --> 00:09:57,600 and it proves the old adage - it's not really WHAT you do 125 00:09:57,600 --> 00:09:59,720 but HOW you do it that matters. 126 00:09:59,720 --> 00:10:06,480 And also, reinforces to me, that to a degree over the last 150/200 years, 127 00:10:06,480 --> 00:10:09,680 British gardens have been hijacked by flowers. 128 00:10:09,680 --> 00:10:13,640 We're obsessed by plants and their variety and their colour 129 00:10:13,640 --> 00:10:17,920 and how to grow them, and we've sort of lost the big picture. 130 00:10:17,920 --> 00:10:20,760 We've lost this sense of a big idea, 131 00:10:20,760 --> 00:10:24,320 expressed with panache and very simply. 132 00:10:24,320 --> 00:10:29,560 And if you want to find that again, well, you can do no better than come to Rousham. 133 00:10:33,400 --> 00:10:37,440 It is a wrench to leave, but I must move on and my next garden 134 00:10:37,440 --> 00:10:42,960 is another of the truly great ones, albeit very different from Rousham. 135 00:10:42,960 --> 00:10:47,760 It is the world-famous garden of Sissinghurst in Kent. 136 00:10:53,600 --> 00:10:58,000 Now, I've known this garden for 25 years and been visiting it regularly 137 00:10:58,000 --> 00:11:02,080 because the current occupant is a very old friend of mine. 138 00:11:02,080 --> 00:11:07,720 But it's been a National Trust garden for around 40 years, 139 00:11:07,720 --> 00:11:13,440 and it seems to me the National Trust have a particular hold on the British psyche. 140 00:11:13,440 --> 00:11:17,080 They completely understand our love for the past, 141 00:11:17,080 --> 00:11:21,080 particularly as manifested by houses and gardens. 142 00:11:21,080 --> 00:11:27,040 And, of course, Sissinghurst is the very best of the National Trust gardens. 143 00:11:29,480 --> 00:11:32,320 Sissinghurst represents and exemplifies 144 00:11:32,320 --> 00:11:35,080 all that the English aspire to in a garden, 145 00:11:35,080 --> 00:11:40,960 not least because it is the setting for the kind of aristocratic romps that the British so love. 146 00:11:40,960 --> 00:11:42,560 Gardening and sex! 147 00:11:42,560 --> 00:11:45,000 Days out don't come much better than that, 148 00:11:45,000 --> 00:11:48,520 especially if there is a cup of tea and a piece of cake thrown in too. 149 00:11:51,920 --> 00:11:56,280 Sissinghurst is a collection of ten distinct garden rooms, 150 00:11:56,280 --> 00:12:00,920 and it was begun in 1930 by the poet and novelist Vita Sackville-West 151 00:12:00,920 --> 00:12:03,560 and her husband Sir Harold Nicolson. 152 00:12:05,120 --> 00:12:09,920 This is the first of the garden rooms they designed, the Cottage Garden. 153 00:12:12,520 --> 00:12:15,600 The Cottage Garden here at Sissinghurst 154 00:12:15,600 --> 00:12:18,400 taps directly 155 00:12:18,400 --> 00:12:24,320 into almost every Englishman and woman's perception and desire for the perfect garden. 156 00:12:24,320 --> 00:12:28,760 It fulfils the need for charm, 157 00:12:28,760 --> 00:12:33,800 for a rural arcadia and above all for colour - a profusion of plants. 158 00:12:33,800 --> 00:12:40,880 But, of course, almost everything about this cottage garden is more than it seems. 159 00:12:40,880 --> 00:12:42,520 It's very carefully designed. 160 00:12:42,520 --> 00:12:48,160 There's a wide range of extraordinary plants that are very high maintenance. 161 00:12:48,160 --> 00:12:50,640 And, like everything else at Sissinghurst, 162 00:12:50,640 --> 00:12:54,960 there is so much more to it than first of all meets the eye. 163 00:12:59,680 --> 00:13:02,400 Sissinghurst is, of course, no cottage 164 00:13:02,400 --> 00:13:05,440 but a staggeringly beautiful Tudor castle. 165 00:13:05,440 --> 00:13:07,720 And while the traditional cottage garden 166 00:13:07,720 --> 00:13:11,880 was a haphazard jumble of flowers, fruit and lots of vegetables, 167 00:13:11,880 --> 00:13:14,160 despite the look of informality, 168 00:13:14,160 --> 00:13:21,600 the planting here is sophisticated and managed beyond the wildest dreams of any cottager. 169 00:13:21,600 --> 00:13:25,920 The job of maintaining all of Sissinghurst's ten garden rooms 170 00:13:25,920 --> 00:13:28,720 falls to the Head Gardener Alexis Datta, 171 00:13:28,720 --> 00:13:34,800 part of the Trust's large team in charge of curating this piece of our national heritage. 172 00:13:34,800 --> 00:13:39,640 How do you manage that sort of museum element of the garden? 173 00:13:39,640 --> 00:13:41,920 Well, I think that's quite a good question, 174 00:13:41,920 --> 00:13:44,840 cos "museum element" is just what I don't want it to be. 175 00:13:44,840 --> 00:13:49,640 It is a living thing, it moves and changes all the time - plants live and die. 176 00:13:49,640 --> 00:13:51,720 And so I don't want it to be at all museumy. 177 00:13:51,720 --> 00:13:59,400 And the idea is that it looks like the sort of idealised maybe version of what Harold and Vita made. 178 00:13:59,400 --> 00:14:03,760 So, we're forever changing things but we try and do it slightly, rather than in a big way. 179 00:14:03,760 --> 00:14:07,360 So it's a lot of change in order that it might stay roughly the same. 180 00:14:07,360 --> 00:14:10,040 - Yes. Exactly, yes. - Yeah. 181 00:14:10,040 --> 00:14:16,080 That said, in a historical garden like this, Alexis has to tread a fine line between 182 00:14:16,080 --> 00:14:22,360 the inevitability of change, and the public's desire to see the garden remain exactly the same. 183 00:14:23,880 --> 00:14:27,520 If Sissinghurst is one of the most famous gardens in the world, 184 00:14:27,520 --> 00:14:30,760 certainly the White Garden is the most famous part of Sissinghurst. 185 00:14:30,760 --> 00:14:34,120 It's iconic and has spawned 1,000 imitations, 186 00:14:34,120 --> 00:14:35,960 none of which are as good. 187 00:14:45,720 --> 00:14:50,680 The reason why the White Garden works so well, is actually not just to do with the white. 188 00:14:50,680 --> 00:14:52,800 The first thing is it's to do with the volume. 189 00:14:52,800 --> 00:14:55,520 It's got this wonderful high box hedges, and, in fact, 190 00:14:55,520 --> 00:14:57,160 they're much higher at this end. 191 00:14:57,160 --> 00:15:02,440 They get taller and taller as they go down, so that the overall level is constant, 192 00:15:02,440 --> 00:15:10,160 and that creates these spaces that are very satisfying and which then spill over with white flowers. 193 00:15:10,160 --> 00:15:15,840 And then the second thing is, it maybe called a white garden, but it's predominantly a green garden. 194 00:15:15,840 --> 00:15:19,120 There's all these different shades of green, which then 195 00:15:19,120 --> 00:15:25,840 just have a sprinkling of white and it's that very pure combination that makes it so satisfying. 196 00:15:26,840 --> 00:15:31,480 Today, while the National Trust may own and maintain Sissinghurst, 197 00:15:31,480 --> 00:15:36,160 Vita and Harold's grandson Adam Nicolson, lives here. 198 00:15:36,160 --> 00:15:40,440 Adam you grew up here, what was it like as a child? What was it like all those years ago? 199 00:15:40,440 --> 00:15:43,480 Well, you can never, you can never sort of take it seriously. 200 00:15:43,480 --> 00:15:47,000 You know, you don't know you're living in a shrine, really. 201 00:15:47,000 --> 00:15:49,800 So it's a great biking ground. 202 00:15:49,800 --> 00:15:53,840 I had a very good track that came through the arch there, 203 00:15:53,840 --> 00:15:57,640 down into the rose garden and then down to the herb garden. 204 00:15:57,640 --> 00:16:01,480 About 57 seconds I could do it, you know, if there weren't too many people there. 205 00:16:01,480 --> 00:16:03,640 - It's unimaginable. - No, I know. 206 00:16:03,640 --> 00:16:06,640 I'm quite tempted to do it again! 207 00:16:06,640 --> 00:16:11,560 No, it is, but, you know, I think in the '60s when I was a boy, 208 00:16:11,560 --> 00:16:15,000 probably 20, 25,000 people a year came. 209 00:16:15,000 --> 00:16:22,320 And now it's 150, 180, 200,000 even, so it's a completely different kettle of fish. 210 00:16:22,320 --> 00:16:28,000 Why do you think Sissinghurst has become such an icon, 211 00:16:28,000 --> 00:16:32,640 and such a sort of archetype of the ideal country home and garden? 212 00:16:32,640 --> 00:16:35,400 I think that now, you know, it's 70 years old now 213 00:16:35,400 --> 00:16:39,440 and you can look at it at the moment it was made in the '30s, 214 00:16:39,440 --> 00:16:44,880 when that great aristocratic sort of country house structure was actually falling apart 215 00:16:44,880 --> 00:16:48,320 under democracy, a tax regime, whatever you like. 216 00:16:48,320 --> 00:16:54,960 And this, in a way, completely intuitively, I think, models the end of a world. 217 00:16:54,960 --> 00:17:01,760 And that is enormously attractive to huge sections of the population 218 00:17:01,760 --> 00:17:05,240 as a sort of nostalgic loveliness. 219 00:17:15,480 --> 00:17:22,320 You know, one of the strange things that I've noticed today, is that although Sissinghurst 220 00:17:22,320 --> 00:17:27,840 is dominated by its architecture of both buildings and plants, people walk round it like this. 221 00:17:27,840 --> 00:17:32,200 They walk round with their heads down and they take pictures like that. 222 00:17:34,000 --> 00:17:41,400 And this exquisitely-orchestrated collection of plants changes its performance from season to season, 223 00:17:41,400 --> 00:17:48,080 even from day to day, but the story, locked in the past, is always the same. 224 00:17:48,080 --> 00:17:50,680 And perhaps only gardens can do that. 225 00:17:50,680 --> 00:17:54,480 Perhaps gardens can refresh the past, 226 00:17:54,480 --> 00:17:59,160 and yet nurture it in a way that nothing else can. 227 00:18:03,760 --> 00:18:10,360 Sissinghurst and Rousham are both gardens heavy with beauty and historical significance. 228 00:18:10,360 --> 00:18:17,200 But I scarcely have time to dwell on them, because immediately I'm off to catch the Eurostar to Paris. 229 00:18:19,560 --> 00:18:22,200 I knew both these English gardens of old 230 00:18:22,200 --> 00:18:25,640 but now I'm about to visit gardens that I have only seen in books. 231 00:18:25,640 --> 00:18:30,160 It's not just their horticultural beauty I am excited about... 232 00:18:30,160 --> 00:18:31,880 There we go. 233 00:18:31,880 --> 00:18:37,000 '..I also, want to discover what they can tell me about northern European culture.' 234 00:18:37,000 --> 00:18:38,960 Oh, look. 235 00:18:42,600 --> 00:18:46,200 I've been blasted effortlessly into Paris in under two hours, 236 00:18:46,200 --> 00:18:47,800 where I have to change trains 237 00:18:47,800 --> 00:18:51,480 in order to get to my first French garden, down in the Loire valley. 238 00:18:56,560 --> 00:19:01,440 I crossed Paris and changed trains with a quick spot of sightseeing on my way. 239 00:19:01,440 --> 00:19:06,560 As I headed to The Chateau of Villandry and its famous garden. 240 00:19:06,560 --> 00:19:09,480 Right in the heart of the Loire region, 241 00:19:09,480 --> 00:19:13,160 Villandry is one of the grandest of the area's many chateaux. 242 00:19:13,160 --> 00:19:15,400 I've wanted to see it for years because, 243 00:19:15,400 --> 00:19:20,280 laid out behind this beautiful building, is a famous garden that enthralled me 244 00:19:20,280 --> 00:19:22,480 from the very first time I heard about it. 245 00:19:26,760 --> 00:19:30,480 I was told that before I actually go into the garden itself, 246 00:19:30,480 --> 00:19:35,520 I should really go up and have a look at it from the top of the chateau's tower. 247 00:20:00,360 --> 00:20:03,640 I was going to tell you about the history and the significance 248 00:20:03,640 --> 00:20:10,160 and symbolism of this layout, and confidently came up here expecting to give a little lesson. 249 00:20:10,160 --> 00:20:17,120 And the honest truth is that I'm almost speechless 250 00:20:17,120 --> 00:20:23,400 at the incredible scale of execution, concept and above all, 251 00:20:23,400 --> 00:20:26,240 the sculptural quality. 252 00:20:26,240 --> 00:20:28,680 It's an immediate, visceral thing - 253 00:20:28,680 --> 00:20:32,040 you just don't get that from photographs or plans. 254 00:20:32,040 --> 00:20:37,240 This is a manipulation of spaces that is really exciting. 255 00:20:38,240 --> 00:20:41,400 The existing chateau was first built on the site 256 00:20:41,400 --> 00:20:47,680 of an earlier fortification by Jean le Breton, between 1532 and 1536. 257 00:20:47,680 --> 00:20:54,720 Le Breton had been an ambassador to Italy and the garden that he made at Villandry was ornate, extensive 258 00:20:54,720 --> 00:20:58,680 and drew on his experiences of Italian Renaissance gardens. 259 00:20:58,680 --> 00:21:02,840 The current owner of the chateau is Henri Carvallo. 260 00:21:02,840 --> 00:21:08,040 Now, Henri, perhaps you could explain to me the layout of the garden. 261 00:21:08,040 --> 00:21:11,560 I mean, for example this garden here, 262 00:21:11,560 --> 00:21:13,800 is clearly full of meaning, isn't it? 263 00:21:13,800 --> 00:21:19,120 Yes, of course. You have here the music garden on the other side of the moat. 264 00:21:19,120 --> 00:21:24,680 And just here, the Love Garden, which is really the extension of the main room of the chateau. 265 00:21:24,680 --> 00:21:29,120 But this walk that we're on now, this platform really, 266 00:21:29,120 --> 00:21:33,200 presumably is deliberately designed to look down on the gardens. 267 00:21:33,200 --> 00:21:36,520 Ah, of course, and it's a general principle of all the 268 00:21:36,520 --> 00:21:42,160 gardens in Villandry is that they are supposed to be seen from above first. 269 00:21:42,160 --> 00:21:45,680 The beauty of this garden, 270 00:21:45,680 --> 00:21:48,400 is mostly in the structure and in the geometry, 271 00:21:48,400 --> 00:21:50,880 rather than in the content of the frame. 272 00:21:50,880 --> 00:21:57,560 In 1754, the entire formal Renaissance garden was ripped out 273 00:21:57,560 --> 00:22:02,200 and replaced with an English-style landscape park like Rousham. 274 00:22:02,200 --> 00:22:06,360 In 1906, Henri's great grandparents bought the chateau 275 00:22:06,360 --> 00:22:10,560 and began the process of restoring the garden to its Renaissance glory. 276 00:22:13,320 --> 00:22:16,120 Quite a responsibility for you now. 277 00:22:16,120 --> 00:22:20,440 It's always very nice and interesting to continue to pursue the work 278 00:22:20,440 --> 00:22:25,000 of your ancestor, and I'm the fourth generation so, it's going on quite well. 279 00:22:25,000 --> 00:22:30,640 And also it brings me always a lot of joy to receive visitors. 280 00:22:30,640 --> 00:22:33,680 Now, this is a dramatic change. 281 00:22:33,680 --> 00:22:35,560 Tell me about this area, Henri. 282 00:22:35,560 --> 00:22:38,000 This is the water garden. 283 00:22:38,000 --> 00:22:43,160 This was created after plants of the 18th Century, and so the water garden 284 00:22:43,160 --> 00:22:48,480 which is centred around a nice water mirror in the side of the river 285 00:22:48,480 --> 00:22:52,240 is really, I think, the most peaceful place of the garden. 286 00:22:58,440 --> 00:23:01,240 So far, I have only viewed the garden from above. 287 00:23:01,240 --> 00:23:05,040 Now I want to go down and get right in amongst it. 288 00:23:07,840 --> 00:23:11,400 Down at ground level in the music garden, you can really 289 00:23:11,400 --> 00:23:15,640 hardly make out the pattern except for where the lavender marks it. 290 00:23:15,640 --> 00:23:22,160 So you have this extraordinary great slab of box hedge. 291 00:23:22,160 --> 00:23:25,240 Now, I assume they would use this machine that they're using 292 00:23:25,240 --> 00:23:28,200 for cutting the hornbeam hedge at the back 293 00:23:28,200 --> 00:23:33,400 to get out over the box and cut it, because I couldn't think how else they did it, and I asked Henri. 294 00:23:33,400 --> 00:23:37,920 And he said, "No, actually what they do is that they part the box 295 00:23:37,920 --> 00:23:42,640 "where two plants meet in here, and then just carefully walk through." 296 00:23:42,640 --> 00:23:48,120 And wade out thigh deep in box, cut what they can and then move on, 297 00:23:48,120 --> 00:23:50,600 and then just push it all back together again. 298 00:23:50,600 --> 00:23:57,480 And that's sort of charmingly human and sort of amateur in this 299 00:23:57,480 --> 00:24:00,200 incredibly impressive professional set-up. 300 00:24:07,640 --> 00:24:10,920 The lowest terrace of Villandry 301 00:24:10,920 --> 00:24:14,360 is the potager and actually this is what I wanted to come and see. 302 00:24:14,360 --> 00:24:18,240 This is why I've chosen it as one of my 80 gardens, 303 00:24:18,240 --> 00:24:21,400 and I've been longing to come and see it for 20 years now. 304 00:24:24,040 --> 00:24:27,560 Potager is taken from the French for soup - potage - 305 00:24:27,560 --> 00:24:32,920 and essentially the garden grows the ingredients to make soup, including vegetables and herbs. 306 00:24:32,920 --> 00:24:39,400 But there are also flowers and fruit and all is set in an intricately formal geometric pattern 307 00:24:39,400 --> 00:24:42,360 delineated with box hedging. 308 00:24:42,360 --> 00:24:44,720 The scale is breathtaking. 309 00:24:44,720 --> 00:24:52,400 In two annual sowings they grow over 80,000 vegetable plants and another 30,000 of flowers. 310 00:24:52,400 --> 00:24:56,400 My visit is at the cusp of two seasons, so it is comparatively empty 311 00:24:56,400 --> 00:25:00,760 but it is easy to see why this is the most famous potager in the world. 312 00:25:03,040 --> 00:25:09,680 Well, I've fulfilled a lifetime's ambition to visit Villandry and I'm not remotely disappointed, in fact, 313 00:25:09,680 --> 00:25:14,080 I'm overwhelmed at how it's exceeded my expectations. 314 00:25:14,080 --> 00:25:19,280 But the surprising thing has been that the reason for this pilgrimage - 315 00:25:19,280 --> 00:25:21,360 the potager, the vegetables - 316 00:25:21,360 --> 00:25:24,480 has NOT been the thing that's blown me away. 317 00:25:24,480 --> 00:25:30,720 I had no idea that the rest of the garden was so beautiful, and so magnificent. 318 00:25:30,720 --> 00:25:36,120 It's almost land art, and yet it's a historical monument, made with such 319 00:25:36,120 --> 00:25:40,480 a degree of generosity and big mindedness. 320 00:25:40,480 --> 00:25:42,640 So, put all that together in a garden, 321 00:25:42,640 --> 00:25:49,280 and you have what is quite frankly an exhilarating package, and I've absolutely adored it. 322 00:25:54,880 --> 00:25:59,000 I'm heading off now to another garden I have long wanted to see, 323 00:25:59,000 --> 00:26:02,960 made by one of France's most famous painters. 324 00:26:02,960 --> 00:26:07,040 This means going back north of Paris to Normandy. 325 00:26:12,120 --> 00:26:17,080 This next garden is about as different from Villandry as could be imagined 326 00:26:17,080 --> 00:26:23,120 and it's essentially modern, in concept at least, because it's over 100 years old now. 327 00:26:23,120 --> 00:26:29,440 And it belongs to the painter Monet, at Giverny. 328 00:26:34,480 --> 00:26:37,080 The queues to see the garden are building up 329 00:26:37,080 --> 00:26:40,240 even though it is not yet officially open 330 00:26:40,240 --> 00:26:44,960 and I have been granted a quick look round before the public are allowed in. 331 00:26:51,320 --> 00:26:56,480 Giverny has become one of the most famous gardens in Europe, if not the world, 332 00:26:56,480 --> 00:27:02,040 and it's visited by up to half a million people in the seven months of the year that it is open. 333 00:27:02,040 --> 00:27:09,160 Monet was obsessed with this garden and painted it continuously for 40 years until his death in 1926. 334 00:27:09,160 --> 00:27:12,040 It is the archetype of the creative relationship 335 00:27:12,040 --> 00:27:14,160 between painting and gardening 336 00:27:14,160 --> 00:27:18,080 and every aspect of the garden is driven by colour and light. 337 00:27:22,160 --> 00:27:25,480 It appears like there's a sort of pair of borders, huge borders, 338 00:27:25,480 --> 00:27:28,280 going up either side this path. 339 00:27:28,280 --> 00:27:35,280 In fact, they're made up of a succession of small raised beds, 340 00:27:35,280 --> 00:27:38,000 each one with its own mini theme, 341 00:27:38,000 --> 00:27:43,600 each mounded up in a slightly chaotic, almost arbitrary pattern. 342 00:27:43,600 --> 00:27:47,120 But then you start to notice that the colours are working together. 343 00:27:47,120 --> 00:27:51,400 Now, it's been said that these are like an artists' palette in the way they're laid out, 344 00:27:51,400 --> 00:27:56,640 but it seems more to me like the way that a picture is built up, a painting. 345 00:27:56,640 --> 00:28:00,680 The overall effect has a sort of general theme, 346 00:28:00,680 --> 00:28:04,280 but then individually you start to look at the way it's put together 347 00:28:04,280 --> 00:28:08,600 and the whole series of little mini events happening, to make the bigger picture. 348 00:28:13,360 --> 00:28:17,320 This is a huge cultural change, it really might as well be another country. 349 00:28:17,320 --> 00:28:24,360 I've left the language of formality, of green layers and plains, 350 00:28:24,360 --> 00:28:28,480 and come to a country where the currency is colour. 351 00:28:28,480 --> 00:28:33,360 But actually as I walk around, it's clear there are surprising connections. 352 00:28:33,360 --> 00:28:38,440 The layout here is very grid-like, it's formal. 353 00:28:38,440 --> 00:28:43,920 It's just it's fuzzy. It's a fuzzy structure and a fuzzy framework, 354 00:28:43,920 --> 00:28:47,240 in order that colour can be saturated into it. 355 00:28:49,200 --> 00:28:56,920 This section of the garden, what was the original cider orchard, is only half of it. 356 00:28:56,920 --> 00:29:00,840 Ten years after buying the house, Monet bought another plot of land 357 00:29:00,840 --> 00:29:04,400 over the road, specifically to make his famous lily ponds. 358 00:29:06,440 --> 00:29:12,160 Jan Huntley from the Claude Monet Foundation has offered to guide me round them. 359 00:29:17,200 --> 00:29:21,160 Monet painted these lily ponds with a kind of simmering mania. 360 00:29:21,160 --> 00:29:24,960 He would work on up to 50 different canvases at any one time, 361 00:29:24,960 --> 00:29:32,600 moving from one to the other as he tried to capture the specific light at that precise moment of the day. 362 00:29:32,600 --> 00:29:38,360 But the Claude Monet Foundation has more than just the constantly changing light to worry about today. 363 00:29:38,360 --> 00:29:44,640 You now have, what, upward of half a million visitors a year? 364 00:29:44,640 --> 00:29:48,880 - Exactly. Yes. - They must impose problems and restrictions 365 00:29:48,880 --> 00:29:51,880 that Monet never had to deal with, and couldn't have dealt with. 366 00:29:51,880 --> 00:29:57,240 Monet's riverbanks were far more grassy, as you can see over there. 367 00:29:57,240 --> 00:30:03,120 We've planted really close to the edges, simply to prevent the tourists from stepping over. 368 00:30:03,120 --> 00:30:06,080 It's not only that, it's also public pressure. 369 00:30:06,080 --> 00:30:12,560 The public expect to see a very famous garden in perfect condition. 370 00:30:12,560 --> 00:30:15,400 Now you know that that's not possible, which does mean that 371 00:30:15,400 --> 00:30:19,520 we have a lot of work that has to be done very early in the morning. 372 00:30:19,520 --> 00:30:25,360 Literally on Mondays, the gardeners come in and anything that is no longer in good shape, disappears 373 00:30:25,360 --> 00:30:27,440 and we put something else in. 374 00:30:27,440 --> 00:30:29,040 I mean, what's the basic philosophy. 375 00:30:29,040 --> 00:30:32,880 Do you think, what would Monet have done under the same situation? 376 00:30:32,880 --> 00:30:37,000 Or do you say well, we have to make a decision for better or worse? 377 00:30:40,160 --> 00:30:44,960 We...have to make a decision for better or for worse, 378 00:30:44,960 --> 00:30:47,720 and the idea of what would Monet have done 379 00:30:47,720 --> 00:30:54,120 does not come into line because Monet would never have had so many visitors. 380 00:30:54,120 --> 00:30:56,480 He was a very private man. 381 00:31:17,880 --> 00:31:20,560 Well, that was really interesting. 382 00:31:20,560 --> 00:31:23,720 I've come away with mixed feelings 383 00:31:23,720 --> 00:31:29,000 because, clearly, if there's a garden that you've been dying to see for a long time, 384 00:31:29,000 --> 00:31:31,160 it's great to go there 385 00:31:31,160 --> 00:31:35,720 but you risk challenging your expectations. 386 00:31:35,720 --> 00:31:39,920 It's a tricky time of year, in between, and they've had some terrible weather so, 387 00:31:39,920 --> 00:31:43,320 not the best time to judge it for its colour. 388 00:31:43,320 --> 00:31:48,200 But what it did make me realise was that unlike any other garden I've seen, 389 00:31:48,200 --> 00:31:52,840 that garden was created as part of the creative process towards painting. 390 00:31:52,840 --> 00:31:58,480 It's a means to an end, however seriously Monet took the horticulture. 391 00:31:58,480 --> 00:32:05,360 And now, they've got the job of maintaining that garden in a deadly professional and serious way, 392 00:32:05,360 --> 00:32:09,600 but without that impetus of a single figure creating something from it. 393 00:32:09,600 --> 00:32:13,560 Sissinghurst still resonates with Harold and Vita's spirit 394 00:32:13,560 --> 00:32:18,560 but Giverney seems emptier, less a living garden and more a tribute to Claude Monet. 395 00:32:22,960 --> 00:32:27,320 Anyway it is time now to move on from Giverney and France. 396 00:32:27,320 --> 00:32:28,880 Bonjour. 397 00:32:28,880 --> 00:32:30,160 Merci. 398 00:32:30,160 --> 00:32:33,440 INDISTINCT SPEECH 399 00:32:35,320 --> 00:32:39,200 The third country in this five-nation jaunt is Belgium, 400 00:32:39,200 --> 00:32:42,800 and a garden just outside the city of Antwerp. 401 00:32:50,560 --> 00:32:55,640 I bought this little book about eight years ago, just speculatively. 402 00:32:55,640 --> 00:32:58,440 I took it home and opened it up and was blown away. 403 00:32:58,440 --> 00:33:03,360 I love the pictures of the gardens inside which seem to combine 404 00:33:03,360 --> 00:33:07,480 formality and tradition, and yet something that was completely 405 00:33:07,480 --> 00:33:12,240 innovative and exactly chimed with what I love about gardens. 406 00:33:12,240 --> 00:33:18,640 And it's called Le Jean And Le Jacques Wirtz, and it's the reason I'm on this train now to Antwerp 407 00:33:18,640 --> 00:33:22,880 to meet Jacques Wirtz after all these years. 408 00:33:25,400 --> 00:33:28,120 Jacques Wirtz is a designer who straddles the divide 409 00:33:28,120 --> 00:33:32,960 between the traditional European garden aesthetic, and contemporary garden style. 410 00:33:32,960 --> 00:33:38,800 And he is a fully paid-up hero of mine, so rather than visit one of his clients' gardens, 411 00:33:38,800 --> 00:33:41,240 of which there are many all over Europe, 412 00:33:41,240 --> 00:33:44,160 I went to meet him at his home, to see his own garden. 413 00:34:04,640 --> 00:34:09,600 I've seen pictures of this, but I had no idea that it was so long. 414 00:34:13,000 --> 00:34:16,680 This four-acre garden was once the walled garden of a great estate, 415 00:34:16,680 --> 00:34:19,280 and the paths were lined with box hedging. 416 00:34:19,280 --> 00:34:23,480 But by 1970, when Jacques bought his house, originally the gardener's cottage, 417 00:34:23,480 --> 00:34:27,680 30 years of neglect had reduced the hedges to an overgrown, gappy sprawl. 418 00:34:27,680 --> 00:34:30,760 Rather than ripping them out and starting afresh, 419 00:34:30,760 --> 00:34:33,960 he used this raw material to make his cloud hedges, 420 00:34:33,960 --> 00:34:39,680 transforming them into one of the great horticultural features of the 20th century. 421 00:34:43,600 --> 00:34:46,640 In so many gardens that you visit 422 00:34:46,640 --> 00:34:50,560 there's a style that you can latch onto, 423 00:34:50,560 --> 00:34:54,640 and you understand it and you appreciate it, and that explains the garden. 424 00:34:54,640 --> 00:34:57,800 What you have here is complete fluidity. 425 00:34:57,800 --> 00:35:01,800 You've got the layout of a formal garden, you've got nursery plants. 426 00:35:01,800 --> 00:35:08,400 There's wonderful flowers, there are vegetables, all growing without boundaries. 427 00:35:08,400 --> 00:35:14,280 It challenges all preconceptions, but actually the elements are completely familiar. 428 00:35:21,600 --> 00:35:25,480 What you've got here are these great specimens - 429 00:35:25,480 --> 00:35:29,120 holly, box, some yew round the corner, like trees in a wood. 430 00:35:29,120 --> 00:35:33,160 I mean, there's no attempt to make it like a garden. 431 00:35:33,160 --> 00:35:35,800 And it's because they're stored. 432 00:35:35,800 --> 00:35:40,080 This is, to me, like a stone mason's yard or maybe an attic, 433 00:35:40,080 --> 00:35:44,200 full of marvellous things just waiting to go. 434 00:35:44,200 --> 00:35:51,200 And it's got all the ingredients of a formal garden, but none of the self-consciousness 435 00:35:51,200 --> 00:35:54,640 and it's that that makes it so magical. 436 00:35:57,920 --> 00:36:00,520 They say you should never meet your heroes 437 00:36:00,520 --> 00:36:03,920 and I was a little nervous before meeting Jacques Wirtz. 438 00:36:03,920 --> 00:36:07,600 But there was also much I wanted to ask him. 439 00:36:07,600 --> 00:36:09,440 Did you intend 440 00:36:09,440 --> 00:36:13,840 to make a garden here or to use it as a nursery? 441 00:36:13,840 --> 00:36:19,240 Well, my intention was not to make a garden, 442 00:36:19,240 --> 00:36:26,440 to stock plants here for use in our firm, for planting outside. 443 00:36:26,440 --> 00:36:32,840 But presumably this hedge here behind you now, that was already there and you clipped it. 444 00:36:32,840 --> 00:36:35,000 Yes. But not only large shapes. 445 00:36:35,000 --> 00:36:40,400 Why did you reform it in this cloud formation, 446 00:36:40,400 --> 00:36:43,400 rather than in straight lines in the European tradition? 447 00:36:43,400 --> 00:36:48,000 Yes, this was a inspiration of the moment, 448 00:36:48,000 --> 00:36:52,280 not to go back to this traditional way and to make 449 00:36:52,280 --> 00:36:54,760 it like... 450 00:36:54,760 --> 00:37:00,240 clouds and what the French name - moutonnement, moutonnement. 451 00:37:00,240 --> 00:37:03,640 Like sheep, you know? 452 00:37:04,640 --> 00:37:08,920 Some people make copies of this in their garden 453 00:37:08,920 --> 00:37:15,200 and if you do that you have to, you need to do it on a big scale, otherwise it is, you know, 454 00:37:15,200 --> 00:37:16,520 it's not good. 455 00:37:16,520 --> 00:37:20,360 Does this garden still please you and give you pleasure? 456 00:37:20,360 --> 00:37:22,840 Yes. Oh, yes, it's very satisfying. 457 00:37:22,840 --> 00:37:27,240 For me, it is a pleasure to every morning to take my breakfast here and 458 00:37:27,240 --> 00:37:35,120 to look at the garden and to make the short walk to the greenhouse, and so on. No, no, I am very happy. 459 00:37:35,120 --> 00:37:39,200 Often this is paradise for me. Yes. 460 00:37:46,800 --> 00:37:50,000 Now, it's obvious that I absolutely loved this garden, 461 00:37:50,000 --> 00:37:55,560 and I suppose it ranks as one of the great experiences of my life. 462 00:37:55,560 --> 00:37:58,720 You know, one of the sort of fantastic artistic experiences, 463 00:37:58,720 --> 00:38:01,560 like going to a film that blows you away, 464 00:38:01,560 --> 00:38:04,680 or reading a novel that changes your life. 465 00:38:04,680 --> 00:38:09,360 And what really seems to be special about it, is the way that space is 466 00:38:09,360 --> 00:38:15,240 sculpted into these extraordinary beautiful objects made out of air, 467 00:38:15,240 --> 00:38:17,120 and contained by plants. 468 00:38:17,120 --> 00:38:20,800 And because the plants are living and changing and have to be clipped, 469 00:38:20,800 --> 00:38:26,280 and also that the whole garden is so fluid, it has fantastic dynamism. 470 00:38:26,280 --> 00:38:32,280 And that balance between sort of poetic delicacy and human energy 471 00:38:32,280 --> 00:38:34,640 seems to be just perfect. 472 00:38:36,160 --> 00:38:40,960 The exhilaration of that experience has more than compensated for the slight disappointment of Giverny, 473 00:38:40,960 --> 00:38:44,000 and I am ready to move on to the next stage of this journey, 474 00:38:44,000 --> 00:38:48,120 and the only other garden on this trip that I have visited before. 475 00:38:50,200 --> 00:38:53,400 From Belgium, I catch another train to the Netherlands 476 00:38:53,400 --> 00:38:59,600 and back 300 years to the Royal garden of Het Loo in Apeldoorn. 477 00:39:04,440 --> 00:39:10,400 The last time I came here was in 1994, when a full restoration of the garden had just been completed. 478 00:39:10,400 --> 00:39:16,840 I have returned because the garden is the best living history lesson that I know. 479 00:39:25,080 --> 00:39:27,920 The garden was made in the middle of a vast forest, 480 00:39:27,920 --> 00:39:30,320 which was pretty much untamed. 481 00:39:30,320 --> 00:39:35,160 Now, at the end of the 17th century, forest or wilderness of any kind 482 00:39:35,160 --> 00:39:40,080 that wasn't being used for productive purposes, was seen as hostile. 483 00:39:40,080 --> 00:39:46,360 There was no romantic idea that it was a beautiful natural world, it was effectively the enemy. 484 00:39:46,360 --> 00:39:51,680 So to make a garden in the middle of that was an expression of man's domination over nature. 485 00:39:51,680 --> 00:39:56,200 William of Orange and his young English wife Mary came here in 1684 486 00:39:56,200 --> 00:40:00,600 and set about creating a palace and garden in a high Baroque style 487 00:40:00,600 --> 00:40:04,440 that above all expressed formality and control. 488 00:40:04,440 --> 00:40:08,720 The Baroque evolved from the earlier Renaissance style but was more elaborate, and more theatrical. 489 00:40:08,720 --> 00:40:14,680 Then in 1689, William and Mary were invited to take over the English crown from Mary's father, 490 00:40:14,680 --> 00:40:18,640 the Catholic James II, and they moved to England. 491 00:40:18,640 --> 00:40:22,280 Bringing with them a whole range of Dutch influences, 492 00:40:22,280 --> 00:40:26,480 but none that was to be more profound, than in gardens. 493 00:40:26,480 --> 00:40:30,520 So the garden here at Het Loo which was only five years old at that point, 494 00:40:30,520 --> 00:40:36,040 proved to have a real and lasting effect on the landscape of Britain. 495 00:40:37,600 --> 00:40:44,880 In fact, detailed aspects of Het Loo, like these golden swans, found their way as lead casts, to Rousham, 496 00:40:44,880 --> 00:40:50,040 but it was the general Dutch influence that was soon seen in gardens right across Britain. 497 00:40:58,000 --> 00:41:02,800 These narrow borders that ribbon the great parterres, 498 00:41:02,800 --> 00:41:05,760 are not really flower borders as we understand them at all. 499 00:41:05,760 --> 00:41:10,600 They're more like our displays of specimens, 500 00:41:10,600 --> 00:41:12,960 which is why you just get one plant in a row, 501 00:41:12,960 --> 00:41:17,760 spaced quite widely apart by modern standards, all the way along. 502 00:41:17,760 --> 00:41:22,800 And the idea was just to enjoy them as they came, individually. 503 00:41:22,800 --> 00:41:27,800 Much more, in fact, like china which, around the time of Het Loo 504 00:41:27,800 --> 00:41:32,240 was collected obsessively in a cabinet or on a mantelpiece. 505 00:41:36,840 --> 00:41:40,280 'I met the curator Ben Groen and walked round the garden. 506 00:41:41,800 --> 00:41:45,120 'Although this is Baroque, and Villandry is high Renaissance, 507 00:41:45,120 --> 00:41:49,280 'the similarity between the two gardens is apparent in broad content if not in detail.' 508 00:41:49,280 --> 00:41:54,320 And like Villandry, Het Loo shared the indignity of the formal garden being swept away 509 00:41:54,320 --> 00:41:57,840 and replaced with a landscape park. 510 00:41:57,840 --> 00:42:03,320 From 1807, William and Mary's garden was lost, buried in the sandy soil. 511 00:42:03,320 --> 00:42:10,360 But in 1970, work began to recreate the original Baroque garden, based on detailed plans and archaeology. 512 00:42:12,280 --> 00:42:17,760 What really strikes me about this is that it looks 513 00:42:17,760 --> 00:42:22,200 brand spanking new, which of course is how it would have looked 514 00:42:22,200 --> 00:42:28,520 in about 1710, or 1720, ie about 20 years after it was made. 515 00:42:28,520 --> 00:42:31,240 Is that deliberate? Are you trying to keep it looking new? 516 00:42:31,240 --> 00:42:36,720 Yes. What we want to give is a frozen image of 1700. 517 00:42:38,520 --> 00:42:44,440 Man is master in nature, that is the message probably sent out at the end of the 17th century. 518 00:42:44,440 --> 00:42:46,880 At that time it was the first... 519 00:42:46,880 --> 00:42:50,640 feeling that, "Yes, we can get it, 520 00:42:50,640 --> 00:42:52,360 "we can master nature." 521 00:42:52,360 --> 00:42:53,920 And now we know we can. 522 00:42:53,920 --> 00:42:56,400 Do you know how many miles of hedging there is? 523 00:42:56,400 --> 00:42:58,760 It's about 30 kilometres. 524 00:42:58,760 --> 00:43:01,040 And that is quite a distance. 525 00:43:01,040 --> 00:43:08,560 They start in the beginning of April and they go until the end of June, 526 00:43:08,560 --> 00:43:14,160 and that means four gardeners are basically the whole day is clipping. 527 00:43:14,160 --> 00:43:18,000 And they go on and they go on. 528 00:43:21,000 --> 00:43:25,480 This garden is most certainly NOT low maintenance. 529 00:43:25,480 --> 00:43:28,440 And to one side of the house, through the Queen's Garden, 530 00:43:28,440 --> 00:43:32,320 is what must be the mother and father of all hedge trimming jobs. 531 00:43:37,800 --> 00:43:44,280 This is the burso, which is my favourite piece of the garden. 532 00:43:44,280 --> 00:43:48,560 The idea of a burso is to create a framework out of wood, 533 00:43:48,560 --> 00:43:50,920 and in this case massive framework, 534 00:43:50,920 --> 00:43:54,440 and then clad it in hornbeam from the outside, which 535 00:43:54,440 --> 00:43:59,480 is then trimmed so it looks like a solid structure from the outside, and yet light filters through. 536 00:43:59,480 --> 00:44:05,640 And the reason for it was so that the Queen could walk protected from the glare of the summer sun. 537 00:44:05,640 --> 00:44:11,120 And the effect is to have this green light filtering through to make, 538 00:44:11,120 --> 00:44:18,960 I think, one of the most magical places in any garden in the world, because you're inside the light. 539 00:44:18,960 --> 00:44:22,520 You're inside the structure of the hedge and it's fragile, 540 00:44:22,520 --> 00:44:27,080 and yet, of course, amazingly strong and I adore it. 541 00:44:27,080 --> 00:44:32,960 But actually whether I like it or not, is not the point about Het Loo. 542 00:44:37,000 --> 00:44:43,240 Unlike any of the other gardens on this trip, the critical thing about Het Loo is that NOT allowed to age. 543 00:44:43,240 --> 00:44:49,280 It is a time machine, deliberately held, bright, fresh and new at the year 1700. 544 00:44:52,240 --> 00:44:56,480 And, in garden terms, what you have here at Het Loo is the mould 545 00:44:56,480 --> 00:45:02,120 that 40 years later, William Kent was to shatter at Rousham. 546 00:45:09,520 --> 00:45:13,360 Leaving Het Loo it's time to pop onto another train back to Amsterdam. 547 00:45:17,520 --> 00:45:22,720 I've got a few pictures on here of the next garden 548 00:45:22,720 --> 00:45:24,280 that I'm visiting. 549 00:45:24,280 --> 00:45:29,520 Now it's designed by a man called Piet Oudolf who I've met a couple of times in England. 550 00:45:29,520 --> 00:45:32,880 He did a gold medal winning garden at Chelsea a few years ago. 551 00:45:32,880 --> 00:45:39,120 And he's one of the leading exponents of, what you might call the new perennial garden, 552 00:45:39,120 --> 00:45:42,000 which uses grasses to a very great degree. 553 00:45:42,000 --> 00:45:46,080 And this garden, which I've never seen before, 554 00:45:46,080 --> 00:45:49,960 is supposed to be a really good example 555 00:45:49,960 --> 00:45:54,240 of a modern European garden. 556 00:46:27,200 --> 00:46:31,200 I mean, clearly it goes without saying that this is a highly designed garden. 557 00:46:31,200 --> 00:46:34,360 It's a designer set piece. 558 00:46:34,360 --> 00:46:37,400 None the worse for that, that's not a criticism. 559 00:46:37,400 --> 00:46:43,920 And based around this slab of water, which I guess if it wasn't starting to rain rather uncomfortably, 560 00:46:43,920 --> 00:46:47,880 we've dodged the weather most of this week, would reflect the sky. 561 00:46:47,880 --> 00:46:51,920 And then you'd have these very crisp lines. 562 00:46:51,920 --> 00:46:59,760 I like the way that the garden is sort of anchored by great slabs of water and bed and hedge, 563 00:46:59,760 --> 00:47:02,960 and then gently softens. 564 00:47:05,360 --> 00:47:10,360 For the first time on this trip, I'm in a garden where everything has been designed from scratch, 565 00:47:10,360 --> 00:47:14,520 and luckily Piet Oudolf has agreed to come along and talk to me about his work. 566 00:47:19,040 --> 00:47:24,320 Do you think there is a sort of European, particularly a northern European 567 00:47:24,320 --> 00:47:27,640 gardening language or style? 568 00:47:27,640 --> 00:47:30,520 More in the planting I suppose nowadays. 569 00:47:30,520 --> 00:47:33,960 It, er... 570 00:47:33,960 --> 00:47:39,000 It's more about sustainability, you know, the word 571 00:47:39,000 --> 00:47:43,680 it's almost fashionable, but we try to create gardens that last longer, 572 00:47:43,680 --> 00:47:45,800 try to find the plants that work better. 573 00:47:45,800 --> 00:47:49,280 Now here you've used grasses to huge effect, 574 00:47:49,280 --> 00:47:51,400 is that part of that process? 575 00:47:51,400 --> 00:47:54,480 No, grasses, I think, are part of the way I like to work. 576 00:47:54,480 --> 00:47:59,480 I think it creates a sort of spontaneity, a sort of natural holistic look, 577 00:47:59,480 --> 00:48:01,120 and that was how it all started. 578 00:48:01,120 --> 00:48:08,440 But, on the other hand, grasses tend to need less water and tend to be easy if you use the right ones, 579 00:48:08,440 --> 00:48:11,040 and they match very well with the plants I like. 580 00:48:11,040 --> 00:48:13,040 Which plants do you like? 581 00:48:13,040 --> 00:48:17,440 Plants that look very, come very close to the natural species. 582 00:48:17,440 --> 00:48:25,320 And that's why I like grasses so much because I don't like big flowers and over cultivated plants. 583 00:48:25,320 --> 00:48:31,440 Where do you see garden design taking us in the future? 584 00:48:31,440 --> 00:48:36,280 I think we can find a way that we can, where ecology meets design. 585 00:48:36,280 --> 00:48:41,640 So you can look for the plants that grow well on the site where you are busy. 586 00:48:41,640 --> 00:48:49,160 And we don't want people to water three times a day so it is very important for the future. 587 00:48:59,040 --> 00:49:05,400 I took a little bit of a punt with this garden because although I'd heard it was really good, 588 00:49:05,400 --> 00:49:10,040 you never really know with a private garden. 589 00:49:10,040 --> 00:49:13,600 But I'm jolly glad I did come because I think it IS good. 590 00:49:13,600 --> 00:49:17,400 Remember, we're only about half an hour from the middle of Amsterdam, 591 00:49:17,400 --> 00:49:23,200 and yet you have a garden that's private, it's domestic and yet it's open out to the landscape. 592 00:49:23,200 --> 00:49:28,040 And, I'm sure that's at the heart of the future of gardening. 593 00:49:28,040 --> 00:49:33,360 It must relate to the surroundings, and relate to the realities of modern life. 594 00:49:33,360 --> 00:49:36,640 So on every level, it's been a really good trip. 595 00:49:46,400 --> 00:49:50,560 I've come to the end of the familiar aspects of Europe 596 00:49:50,560 --> 00:49:55,320 and gardens that I've certainly known of, if not actually visited before. 597 00:49:55,320 --> 00:49:58,680 But before I finish, I want to go out of my European comfort zone, 598 00:49:58,680 --> 00:50:04,720 and go as far north as possible where there still might be a garden to see. 599 00:50:11,400 --> 00:50:16,600 So, for the final stage, I take a plane for the first time on this trip 600 00:50:16,600 --> 00:50:20,680 to go to the island of Tromso in the far north of Norway. 601 00:50:26,160 --> 00:50:31,320 And after weeks of constant rain and grey cloud, I find bright sunshine, 602 00:50:31,320 --> 00:50:39,320 all day AND all night because at this time of year up here, in midsummer, the sun never sets. 603 00:50:41,240 --> 00:50:43,800 This is taking some getting used to. 604 00:50:45,320 --> 00:50:51,640 I've come one plane hop to another country and it really does feel like another world. 605 00:50:51,640 --> 00:50:55,240 Here we are with snow on the mountains, the brightest sunshine you can imagine. 606 00:50:55,240 --> 00:50:58,640 I mean, it's just almost impossible to see without dark glasses. 607 00:50:58,640 --> 00:51:05,400 It's hot, much hotter than it was in mainland, grey rainy Europe, 608 00:51:05,400 --> 00:51:06,840 and there's perpetual light. 609 00:51:06,840 --> 00:51:10,920 It's light all night long it's as bright as this. 610 00:51:10,920 --> 00:51:18,560 And yet I know that there is the flipside, which is this perpetual darkness in the middle of winter. 611 00:51:18,560 --> 00:51:20,720 And although it's very, very different, 612 00:51:20,720 --> 00:51:24,840 what it feels like is all those elements of northern Europe, 613 00:51:24,840 --> 00:51:28,320 stretched out to the very limits that they'll go. 614 00:51:32,960 --> 00:51:37,560 I have to pinch myself to remember that Tromso is in fact 200 miles 615 00:51:37,560 --> 00:51:42,200 inside the Arctic Circle and is covered by snow for six months of the year. 616 00:51:42,200 --> 00:51:46,880 I am fascinated to discover what it is like to garden with these extremes of light and dark 617 00:51:46,880 --> 00:51:49,600 and of summer and winter climates. 618 00:51:49,600 --> 00:51:52,840 If ever gardening was on the edge, it is so up here. 619 00:51:55,040 --> 00:51:59,040 But as I come into the world's most northerly botanic garden 620 00:51:59,040 --> 00:52:03,960 through its woodland park, it is clear that the restricted growing season has surprising benefits. 621 00:52:03,960 --> 00:52:09,960 Everything here has a freshness like the very best of an early English May day, 622 00:52:09,960 --> 00:52:12,240 but bathed in intense midsummer light, 623 00:52:12,240 --> 00:52:16,000 which is a glorious combination and I have never seen it before. 624 00:52:27,560 --> 00:52:31,200 This is a complete surprise. 625 00:52:31,200 --> 00:52:34,760 Not quite sure what I had expected, actually, but it wasn't this. 626 00:52:34,760 --> 00:52:41,160 It was much more a question of harsh weather and tiny plants clinging to the rocks. 627 00:52:41,160 --> 00:52:47,160 Yet...I've walked through this marvellous flower-filled wood. 628 00:52:47,160 --> 00:52:52,600 The hedgerows and the sides of the roads are smothered with flowers. 629 00:52:52,600 --> 00:52:55,520 And here you come into the botanic garden 630 00:52:55,520 --> 00:53:02,800 with bright colour and there are the mountains covered in snow and the fjord... 631 00:53:02,800 --> 00:53:06,640 which is a delightful surprise. 632 00:53:09,600 --> 00:53:15,480 The Tromso Botanic Gardens houses a wide range of alpine species from around the world, 633 00:53:15,480 --> 00:53:21,680 collected into geographic groups and planted in amongst the boulders and rocks throughout the garden. 634 00:53:21,680 --> 00:53:28,920 These cover a surprising range of shapes and sizes from the positively lusty to the minute and delicate. 635 00:53:28,920 --> 00:53:32,720 What they all have in common is their adaptation to these surroundings 636 00:53:32,720 --> 00:53:38,320 and all are completely at home in this most extreme of garden environments. 637 00:53:39,840 --> 00:53:45,680 Arve Elvebakk is the curator here at Tromso and he specialises in Arctic plants. 638 00:53:50,040 --> 00:53:53,440 One of the extraordinary things, you're open I believe, all the time. 639 00:53:53,440 --> 00:53:56,120 Yes. All days of the year. 640 00:53:56,120 --> 00:53:58,840 And not just all days, but all day too. 641 00:53:58,840 --> 00:54:01,560 You can come here at two, three in the morning, can't you? 642 00:54:01,560 --> 00:54:04,800 - Yes, yes. People do. - Really? 643 00:54:04,800 --> 00:54:06,520 That's quite extraordinary. 644 00:54:06,520 --> 00:54:09,640 How is it possible to make a garden so far north? 645 00:54:09,640 --> 00:54:12,000 Well, it's thanks to the Gulf Stream. 646 00:54:12,000 --> 00:54:15,560 We are north of the Arctic Circle but we don't have an Arctic climate. 647 00:54:15,560 --> 00:54:19,880 We are surrounded by forests, and I have visited Greenland at the same latitude, 648 00:54:19,880 --> 00:54:22,800 and it's like a totally different world. 649 00:54:22,800 --> 00:54:27,480 They have two, three degrees in summer and ice and polar bears and walrus, 650 00:54:27,480 --> 00:54:30,880 and are far to the north of the forest. 651 00:54:30,880 --> 00:54:35,280 So if we had changed place, if the Gulf Stream would stop, 652 00:54:35,280 --> 00:54:36,880 we would have a problem. 653 00:54:36,880 --> 00:54:40,680 There is talk of that happening, isn't there, with climate change? 654 00:54:40,680 --> 00:54:44,280 Yes. They discuss if there is a balance and the oceanographers say 655 00:54:44,280 --> 00:54:47,560 that, "Oh, we think it will last at least for 100 years or more." 656 00:54:47,560 --> 00:54:49,560 So I hope they are right. 657 00:54:51,480 --> 00:54:55,600 The warmth of the Gulf Stream means that it's not just alpine plants 658 00:54:55,600 --> 00:54:58,280 that can thrive in this furthest outreach of Europe. 659 00:54:58,280 --> 00:55:02,960 Brynhild Morkved is working on a collection of more familiar plants, 660 00:55:02,960 --> 00:55:05,640 mainly gathered from local households 661 00:55:05,640 --> 00:55:09,600 and these tell a unique gardening story from northern Norway. 662 00:55:11,280 --> 00:55:16,360 This is the green cultural heritage of northern Norway. 663 00:55:16,360 --> 00:55:20,480 The plants that the old women had had in their gardens for... 664 00:55:20,480 --> 00:55:22,120 hundreds of years. 665 00:55:22,120 --> 00:55:25,760 The colour of this ranunculus is incredible. 666 00:55:25,760 --> 00:55:28,320 I mean, these bright golden buttons. 667 00:55:28,320 --> 00:55:32,600 Yes. 50 years ago, you could find it in different gardens in the whole of Norway 668 00:55:32,600 --> 00:55:37,320 but now it has disappeared from all the other places. 669 00:55:37,320 --> 00:55:40,920 - But why has it disappeared? - It's a field form of a weed. 670 00:55:40,920 --> 00:55:44,600 - Yes, a weed. They perhaps have cleared it away. - They just weed it out. 671 00:55:44,600 --> 00:55:49,720 Yes. So today, that is the only old...collection 672 00:55:49,720 --> 00:55:53,920 we have in whole of Norway of that plant. 673 00:55:53,920 --> 00:55:58,400 It must be incredibly difficult to garden in this climate. 674 00:55:58,400 --> 00:56:04,000 People from other places of the world, they think nothing grows in the north. 675 00:56:04,000 --> 00:56:09,160 I also thought that when I come to Tromso, and then it was very big 676 00:56:09,160 --> 00:56:12,840 flowers and very beautiful, so... And I think 677 00:56:12,840 --> 00:56:17,920 people that are at the border for growing, they want to try to... 678 00:56:17,920 --> 00:56:22,280 "Oh, I want to try this plant and I want to try this plant." 679 00:56:23,960 --> 00:56:27,360 I confess that botanic gardens don't always thrill me, 680 00:56:27,360 --> 00:56:30,440 but to put plants in context and to see them growing 681 00:56:30,440 --> 00:56:37,040 in their natural habitat, especially one as extreme as this, is really inspiring. 682 00:56:37,040 --> 00:56:41,960 And it feels appropriate to finish this journey as far from where I began as possible, 683 00:56:41,960 --> 00:56:47,480 as though any further and the very notion of a garden would fall off the edge of the world. 684 00:56:47,480 --> 00:56:51,080 I've come up this hill just outside Tromso, 685 00:56:51,080 --> 00:56:57,640 literally to give myself a little bit of distance on this trip and to take stock. 686 00:56:57,640 --> 00:57:03,320 Because, down there is this town, 200 miles into the Arctic Circle. 687 00:57:03,320 --> 00:57:05,160 Behind me is the midnight sun. 688 00:57:05,160 --> 00:57:08,600 It literally is midnight, this bright light 689 00:57:08,600 --> 00:57:13,040 which is the sun skirting over the Arctic and beyond there's nothing. 690 00:57:13,040 --> 00:57:16,280 No more gardens, hardly any more people at all. 691 00:57:16,280 --> 00:57:19,840 Just the frozen waste for most of the year. 692 00:57:21,040 --> 00:57:25,840 I began this journey wondering how gardens can best serve history. 693 00:57:25,840 --> 00:57:30,720 Certainly, gardens can bring the past alive in the most vivid way possible 694 00:57:30,720 --> 00:57:33,960 because, unlike a building or a painting, 695 00:57:33,960 --> 00:57:37,160 the components are constantly changing. 696 00:57:37,160 --> 00:57:40,800 But, as my journey progressed, I began to realise that whatever 697 00:57:40,800 --> 00:57:45,080 their history, however powerful the cult of personality behind the garden 698 00:57:45,080 --> 00:57:51,760 the gardens of Northern Europe seemed all to be shaped most by light or the lack of it. 699 00:57:51,760 --> 00:57:59,360 How the Northern European gardens sculpt, reflect, harness or play with the available light 700 00:57:59,360 --> 00:58:03,560 is the creative bond that runs down through all the years. 701 00:58:07,040 --> 00:58:11,960 And to come here, a place of perpetual sunlight in the summer, 702 00:58:11,960 --> 00:58:16,160 and its flipside, perpetual dark in the winter, 703 00:58:16,160 --> 00:58:23,160 takes that northern European obsession with light to its extremes, and I can go no further. 704 00:58:28,000 --> 00:58:30,560 Join me next time as I travel east 705 00:58:30,560 --> 00:58:35,440 to experience the diverse cultural influences of South East Asia 706 00:58:35,440 --> 00:58:38,640 on a quest to find the real tropical garden. 707 00:59:02,040 --> 00:59:05,080 Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd 708 00:59:05,080 --> 00:59:08,120 E-mail subtitling@bbc.co.uk 70188

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