The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Our secret garden: Duo tend botanical wonder in splendid isolation

- By George Mair news@sundaypost.com

It is one of scotland’s most spectacula­r botanical treasures, once described as the best of its kind in the western world.

But s i n ce loc k d o w n , the Japanese Garden at Cowden, Clackmanna­nshire, has been tended by just one woman and her nephew. The historic garden is one of only a few surviving sites of its kind in the UK.

Created in 1908 for the pioneering explorer Ella Christie, the garden is run by a charitable trust, the Japanese Garden at Cowden Castle SCIO, chaired by her great-great niece Sara Stewart.

Following years of restoratio­n involving teams of experts from Japan, the garden fully reopened to the public last year, when it attracted 22,000 visitors.

The trust was hoping for another bumper year when their plans were thrown into turmoil.

With no income from visitors and all paid staff on furlough, the challenge of maintainin­g the garden fell to Sara. Together with her 19-year-old nephew Rory, she hopes to prevent the garden becoming overgrown until it can reopen after the coronaviru­s crisis and the profession­als can get back to work.

Sara said: “Rory and I are amateurs. Thankfully the profession­als left us very precise instructio­ns.

“We’ve spent time watering, which is a relatively easy, but we’ve also edged, weeded, fed and mulched about 150 shrub circles.” Rory, studying land management at Newcastle University, volunteere­d to help his aunt after returning to his family home during lockdown.

Sara admitted she was grateful, adding: “I’m the chairperso­n of the charity so it’s my duty, but I also consider it a real privilege.

“I’m proud of Rory as he’s 19 – he could be sitting in front of the TV with a beer, but I think he also sees this as a privilege. He just finds another challenge and gets on with it.” Sara’s great great aunt Ella broke with traditiona­l ideas about the role of women to mount ambitious solo expedition­s around the globe.

She was inspired by the gardens of Kyoto and Tokyo to create her own Japanese garden in the grounds of her home at Cowden Castle, near Dollar. Cowden’s Japanese name Shahrakuen means “a place of pleasure and delight”. Sara added: “This place is known for its extraordin­ary tranquilit­y.

“I feel that the sooner we can open it, the better for the benefit of everybody. But they won’t benefit if it looks like a long hairdo.”

 ??  ?? Rory and Sara Stewart hard at work edging, weeding, feeding and mulching one of the garden’s 150 shrub circles
Rory and Sara Stewart hard at work edging, weeding, feeding and mulching one of the garden’s 150 shrub circles
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 ??  ?? Ella Christie in 1909
Ella Christie in 1909

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