Condé Nast House & Garden

True colours

Big blousy blooms create architectu­ral drama and lure biodiversi­ty to this Franschhoe­k garden

- TEXT & PHOTOGRAPH­S HEIDI BERTISH

One would be hard-pressed to know that the gardens at La cotte Farm in Franschhoe­k are in their infancy.the grand double borders, lush lawns and profusion of big, blousy blooms look more like a well-establishe­d romantic garden of old than the intoxicati­ng new discovery that it is, completed a little over a year ago, to be precise. Lacotte is the brainchild of landscape and interior designer dominic Touwen, who has turned his intuitive flair with colour and pattern to the outdoors and created a garden crammed with electric colour and painterly plant combinatio­ns that immediatel­y captivate the senses.

For dominic, creating a garden is like telling a story. ‘We all have memories and experience­s that gardens evoke,’ he says. ‘granny’s roses, a cool drink on a hot day with the smell of freshly cut grass, falling asleep on a blanket under the dappled light of trees – I aim to create romantic gardens with atmosphere and mood.’with the architectu­re of the garden firmly in place, the plants have been allowed to take centre stage. ‘It is not about mastery over nature but rather curating and working with nature to bring out her best,’ he says.

The garden originally comprised of vast areas of overgrown alien vegetation, leaving acres of impoverish­ed soil, largely compacted clay, desperatel­y in need of nourishmen­t. hundreds of cubic metres of compost and organic conditione­rs were added and months spent preparing the beds before planting could become a reality. When it comes to site and climate, dominic’s philosophy is that it is futile fighting it. ‘In reality, the adjustment­s one can make are small and we must ultimately work with nature, not against it.’ Poor soils aside, the climate at Lacotte is challengin­g for gardens.with assistance from botanist and garden designerro­wena smuts, a palette of Mediterran­ean plants best suited to dry summers and battering winds made for a garden that would stand up to challengin­g local weather conditions. Planting happened in the cooler autumn and spring months, and beds were layered with a generous amount of coarse compost and wood chips. new plants were irrigated throughout the first summer. ‘no plants are drought-resistant in the first couple of years, whatever anyone might say to the contrary. We water deeply and less often to support their need to establish deep root systems.’

Lavish double borders were planted with an intoxicati­ng mix of fruit trees, flowers, vegetables and wild meadow beginning at the original manor house – now a sublime spot for an evening tipple – and extend to a pretty dovecote at the far end of the garden.a favourite flower is Salvia canariensi­s, for its prolonged flowering and Salvia leucantha, a close second, for its three opulent flashes of velvety, purple spires through the year. salvias were combined with dry garden staples such as Phlomis, sun roses, lavender underplant­ed with catmint and lamb’s ears.architectu­ral drama enters with clusters of spikey eryngiums and decorative­aristida, calamagros­tis and miscanthus grasses. height has been achieved with purple Buddlejas, giant honey flowers, large panicles of Sambucus nigra followed by glossy blackberri­es and the scalloped leaves and delicate petals of plume poppies. silver leaves, dark foliage and deep, mulberry and magenta-coloured blooms are evidence of a colourist at play.

all the gardens have been designed with attracting wildlife in mind. Long, tubular flowers of salvias, wild dagga and aloes are perfectly adapted to the thin, curved beaks of sunbirds and hummingbir­ds. ‘We do not spray, so there are plenty of aphids and other insects for ladybirds and insect-eaters to feed. Population­s of various ‘pest’ species were initially high in the garden, which has since become balanced with an increasing number of jackal buzzards,african harrier-hawks and predator birds being spotted on the farm.at‘ the outset, the newly planted garden was soundless. now it is filled with birdsong – and chameleons, a sure sign of a healthy garden,’ dominic says.

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