Gardens Illustrated Magazine

WILD ABOUT WEEDS: GARDEN DESIGN WITH REBEL PLANTS

Laurence King Publishing, £19.99 ISBN 978-1786275301

- by Jack Wallington

Weed, wild or garden-worthy? This well-argued advocacy for rebel plants shows why we should all be growing a few in our gardens.

Reviewer Ambra Edwards is a writer and garden historian.

Jack Wallington wants us all to embrace weeds. They’re easy, they’re wildlife-friendly, and they fit with the modern enthusiasm for naturalist­ic ecological planting.

But what exactly is a weed? The word, he suggests, is ‘merely a broad and negative term associated with any plant that pops up where we weren’t expecting it’. He settles on a definition as ‘a plant that reproduces seemingly uncontroll­ably’, and divides garden weeds into the ‘good, the bad and the unapprecia­ted.’ The ‘good’ includes plants many of us grow as wildflower­s: forget-me-nots, violets, bluebells and foxgloves. The ‘bad’ – too troublesom­e to introduce into any garden – includes ground elder, bindweed, horsetail and, curiously, fennel. You may be surprised not to see stinging nettles or docks on this list or to be encouraged to plant giant hogweed or ragwort – both illegal to allow to spread or to

plant in the wild in the UK. We are on safer ground with the ‘glowing amber jewels’ of Pilosella aurantiaca, the elegant spires of Linaria purpurea or the wildly fashionabl­e umbellifer Daucus carota.

Wallington’s lively and thought-provoking text urges us to be more imaginativ­e in our gardens – to cherish the stately architectu­re of teasels or the delicate ferny foliage of herb robert; to use oxalis as decorative groundcove­r; to encourage campanulas and corydalis to proliferat­e on walls, even to plant daisies in hanging baskets. But the requiremen­t for an internatio­nal readership throws up local anomalies: British gardeners will be astonished to see exotic Ricinus communis classified as a weed

(it is considered noxious in California); clarificat­ion of the UK law surroundin­g invasive species (especially Japanese knotweed) would have been more helpful.

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