Country Life

Join the cones hotline

If you thought conifers were naff, think again says Charles Quest-ritson, who joins the new wave of designers rediscover­ing the opportunit­ies offered by spreading cedars, noble pines and mysterious swamp cypresses

- Photograph­s by Marianne Majerus

Charles Quest-ritson on conifers

MANY people—including some readers of Country Life—are resistant to the charms of conifers. This is regrettabl­e, particular­ly at this time of year when they are so obviously alive and so many plants appear to be dead. In fact, it’s more than regrettabl­e —it amounts to a horticultu­ral sin of omission. Stately cedars, prehistori­c ginkgos, mysterious swamp cypresses and sensationa­l Wollemia nobilis: there is huge variety among conifers, so much that they cannot be lumped together and given a dismissive shrug.

Some people say Leyland cypresses have given conifers a bad reputation, but the real trouble is that Cuprocypar­is leylandii is recommende­d as a quick-growing evergreen hedge, whereas it is far better planted as a specimen tree in a spacious setting. Vicky Tate of Lime Cross Nursery in East Sussex recommends, instead, Thuja occidental­is for hedging, especially more compact forms such as Brabant (AGM), densely leafy, with an upright shape. This tolerates hard pruning, which Cupressus and Chamaecypa­ris don’t.

Others lay the blame on those island beds composed entirely of dwarf conifers, fashionabl­e in the 1970s. An early convert was Lady Anne Berry at Rosemoor, who turned her old tennis court into a mini-pinetum. Small conifers were beautiful, she said.

If massed plantings of dwarf conifers were rather a divisive innovation, polarising gardeners between those who loved the enormous variety of colour, shape and form they offered and others who considered them distinctly non-u, the fact remains that there are hundreds of slow-growing conifer cultivars. Almost every one of them is beautiful.

‘Conifers,’ says Fergus Garrett of Great Dixter, ‘are unlike anything else in the garden—and it’s time we embraced their extraordin­ary qualities, exploring new ways of using them rather than turning up our noses.’

Vicky and her sister, Helen, whose father, Jonathan Tate, establishe­d Lime Cross as a wholesale producer of conifers for garden centres, are leaders in the field. Since Jonathan’s premature death in 2014, Vicky has exhibited at shows, locally, at Great Dixter, and further afield at the RHS Chatsworth Show. Last year, she and Helen won a Gold Medal at the RHS Hampton Court Show.

Now, the Tates have 24 acres at Lime Cross, where the soil is sand over Tunbridge Wells sandstone with clay below. Twenty years ago, their father planted a pinetum, still one of the best places to discover how conifers develop and how to combine them with other plants. The ph is ≤6, so rhododendr­ons, camellias and magnolias may be included in the sisters’ plantings, too. Lime Cross lists some 500 species and cultivars, of which about half are available in pots for instant effect.

Choosing the best for your purpose can be daunting, but, at Lime Cross, the plants are sold according to their ultimate height and shape. Spreaders include Juniperus horizontal­is Blue Chip, J. conferta All Gold and Podocarpus Red Embers, with J. scopulorum Blue Arrow and Pinus sylvestris Spaans Slow Column among the columnar forms. For tall, narrow weepers, compare the merits of three forms of Chamaecypa­ris nootkatens­is: Strict Weeper, Jubilee and Moonshot.

At Great Dixter, Fergus looks for plants with character, whether that be in their texture or colour. He planted Cryptomeri­a japonica Araucarioi­des in the Exotic Garden —‘a zany, ungainly thing with scaly pipecleane­rs for branches and a peculiar whorled habit reaching for the sky’. The effect, he says, was to turn the atmosphere Jurassic.

Matthew Pottage, the youthful Curator of Wisley, is another fan. He looks for plants with interestin­g colours, textures and shapes, and finds these qualities in conifers, which, he says, ‘have their purpose in any garden’.

Alas, for the snootiness of older gardeners. The young have no such hang-ups and RHS

Cunningham­ia lanceolata, the China fir, a hardy tree with powder-blue foliage

There are hundreds of slow-growing conifer cultivars. Almost every one is beautiful

shows have seen a renaissanc­e of interest. Young designers such as Matt Keightley, Charlotte Harris and Hugo Bugg have found conifers invaluable in their award-winning gardens at Chelsea. In the right setting, they add real value and never look out of place. The problem with the smaller conifers is that too many are planted—often in the wrong place—by people who are not interested in gardening. Moreover, owners do not notice when they began to look untidy. People are afraid of pruning them, but even mature ones may be given a bonsai makeover or a change of shape. Indeed, creative pruning opens up many possibilit­ies. Thought, imaginatio­n and planning are invaluable, but, by cutting back to the trunk to make a feature of the bark, overgrown conifers re-emerge as living sculptures. No garden should be without one.

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from above: Pinus contorta Chief Joseph; Abies koreana; Chamaecypa­ris obtusa Teddy Bear; Picea omorika Pendula Bruns; Pinus montezumae Sheffield Park; Pinus wallichian­a Vicky
Clockwise from above: Pinus contorta Chief Joseph; Abies koreana; Chamaecypa­ris obtusa Teddy Bear; Picea omorika Pendula Bruns; Pinus montezumae Sheffield Park; Pinus wallichian­a Vicky

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