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- WORDS STEPHANIE MAHON PHOTOGRAPH­S CLAIRE TAKACS

Inspired by his apprentice­ship at the Beth Chatto garden, California-based designer Bernard Trainor explores plant possibilit­ies in his own garden

In his private garden in California, designer Bernard Trainor explores new plants and possibilit­ies

Though he has now settled in the USA, and comes originally from Australia, landscape designer. Bernard Trainor began to develop his core ideas about plants and place in Britain. As a young horticultu­ral apprentice, he came to the UK to work with the late, great Beth Chatto, and his experience in her Essex garden was life changing. “I’d thought about planting for climate before, but working with Beth cemented those ideas,” he says. “She was also just the best person, with incredible values and a real work ethic – she didn’t just preach it, she lived it. Working there not only helped me with my garden design but also personally on every level. It still does. Every day, there’s something in my work that reflects my time with her.” Bernard went on to study landscape design at Chelsea Physic Garden, before returning down under, but it was in California, where he moved two decades ago, that he made his name. Having gone for a job, he met his wife and ended up staying and starting his own business. The projects that his practice Ground Studio creates show the inf luence of his early mentor in their approach. “I’m always interested in the specifics of a particular place,” he says. “I try to decide what would be most appropriat­e and authentic for each site, and then consider the people who are going to live there, and the architectu­re they’re going to live in.”

Another major factor for him is drought tolerance – of all the Mediterran­ean climate regions, it is California that gets the least amount of summer rainfall. “It becomes not only about the look of a garden, but also what resources are needed to grow plants there.” This has been at the forefront of his mind over the past eight years as he created his own garden, perched high above the water of Carmel Bay on the coast of Monterey County. He had been living two hours’ drive north in San Francisco when a new project began to bring him to the area regularly. “I realised that going there was the happiest day of my week. I loved the area so much.” When the opportunit­y arose to buy this 1940s’ property with an acre of land and incredible views he jumped at it. The house and guest house needed a little cosmetic work, but the garden was a blank slate, and that was a good thing, he says. “The reason I was buying the property was to create a garden, instead of inheriting somebody else’s. But it was a bit of a mess.”

Designers often speak of the difficulty of being their own client, and Bernard was no different. “I started out thinking I would do something minimal, with fewer plant choices, but soon realised what I really wanted was to create a sort of laboratory where I could try things out. I wanted to use a lot of cultivars, but without it looking busy, because gardens with too many plants can be visually jarring. That was my challenge – to grow lots of different plants, but in a cohesive way. I also tried to make it liveable, so it would be comfortabl­e for my family and visitors.”

The garden is steeply sloping, and its layout is dictated by several changes in level. At the lowest level, there is a simple entry courtyard with water feature, and then a gateway to a bocce [a game similar to boules] court and seating area. Steps ascend up to the main level around the house and guest house, which have their own gardens. Bernard was judicious in his choice of materials, painting and reusing old bricks that were already on site, adding areas of crushed gravel, timber steps, and paving in sandstone and concrete.

These hard edges are softened with layers of textural planting drawn from all corners of the world – a panoply of form and foliage, with a variety of spongy and spiky succulents rubbing up against soft grasses, choice perennials and anchoring shrubs. The emphasis is on managing the dry climate, so apart from containers, the plants survive without supplement­al watering once they have establishe­d.

There were many mature trees in the garden when Bernard moved in, predominan­tly California live oak ( Quercus agrifolia), Monterey pine ( Pinus radiata) and Monterey cypress ( Cupressus macrocarpa). These natives manage without much rainfall, though they benefit in summer from the coastal fogs that roll in off the bay – the water vapour settles on the leaves and then drips down, nourishing the ground below.

Choosing the rest of the planting was a challenge, not just because of the lack of rainfall, but because of underlying rock. Behind the house, there is less than a foot of soil to plant into, and what is there is technicall­y old sand dune and exceptiona­lly well draining, so planting on the slope has to be even more resilient.

For his clients’ gardens, Bernard uses native California­n plants and also those from the four other Mediterran­ean zones in the world: the Mediterran­ean basin, South Africa, Australia and central Chile. “It adds up to a pretty big palette of plants, with perhaps too many choices, which is always a good problem to have.” Even with this diverse choice, however, there is one big caveat – most Mediterran­ean-climate plants are summer deciduous, and shut down in this period when the least amount of water is available. So, for his own garden, he turned this inherent challenge into an opportunit­y. “My garden looks best in winter, which is rare, and I have learned to celebrate a plant coming more alive in autumn and winter, but looking as if it is hurting a little in spring and summer. That has been a complete mindset change.”

He also uses his beds and borders to trial new cultivars, to find out how drought tolerant they are, what size they grow to and how long they perform for. “I experiment with growing things in new ways too,” he explains. “I might shape something or clip it more than I would in a client’s garden, to see how it responds. It’s all about stretching myself as a designer. I’m always refining things.” The garden is also Bernard’s own personal retreat. “I love just puttering around,” he says. “Much of my time here is spent gardening or painting. This is where I get my satisfacti­on.” USEFUL INFORMATIO­N Find out more about Bernard’s work at groundstud­io.com

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