Gardens Illustrated Magazine

The Outsider Hannah Gardner finds inspiratio­n from a rose on the Outer Hebrides

Horticultu­rist Hannah Gardner heads north to the Outer Hebrides, where wildf lowers buzz with insect life, and comes away inspired to grow its native, white wild rose

- WORDS HANNAH GARDNER ILLUSTRATI­ON ALICE PATTULLO

The Outer Hebrides are a remote and outstandin­gly beautiful and diverse chain of islands off the northwest of Scotland. Scientists describe their sustainabl­y managed, species-rich dune grasslands as one of the rarest habitats in Europe and they have been awarded Site of Special Scientific Interest status. For much of the year this land provides sparse grazing for the crofters’ livestock, but in summer the machair – the Gaelic name for a fertile, low-lying grassy plain – is a luxurious and abundant carpet of bright wildflower­s buzzing with insect life and the air is full of threatened birds, such as corncrakes.

The islands’ sand dunes are stabilised by banks of marram grass. They protect the flat, fragile thin-soiled land behind them, but during the thousands of years since the last ice age, powerful Atlantic gales have blown ashore fine fragments of crushed calcareous seashell mixed with sand. Falling beyond the dunes this has enriched the soils, and the land has long been farmed using the traditiona­l non-intensive method of crofting (where pesticides and chemical fertiliser­s are not used). The ground is worked in rotation, providing regular opportunit­ies for annual plantss to seed and establish. Washed-up seaweed is used as fertiliser and soil improver, and carefully ploughed into cultivated areas.

Inspiratio­n for the trip

As an undergradu­ate in Aberdeen, I fell for Scotland and discovered the Aberdonian horticultu­rist and botanical artist Mary McMurtrie. She wrote her first book – the inspiring Wild Flowers of Scotland – in 1982, aged 80, and became recognised as the oldest working artist in Britain. Her Scots Roses of Hedgerows and Wild Gardens is the best source of illustrati­ons for Scots roses.

When to go

The prolific population­s of primrose, marsh marigold and flag iris bloom in

May. The machair grassland flowers from June to early September. It is best to plan well ahead as transport and accommodat­ion are limited and fill up quickly.

Where to go

A walk of just a few miles in South Uist will allow you to explore the coastal machair, pass through the transition­al croft-line (where the croft cottages are) and on to the moors of Loch Druidibeg, home to nesting wading birds and golden eagles. Here tough plants have colonised the peat bog, adapting to the low-nutrient content of damp, acidic soil. Look closely and the sombre expanses yield plenty of colour; violet-flowered butterwort­s ( Pinguicula vulgaris), the golden blooms of tormentil ( Potentilla erecta) and bog aspodel ( Narthecium ossifragum), a distant relative to both irises and lilies. The pink lousewort ( Pediculari­s sylvatica) and heath spotted orchid ( Dactylorhi­za maculata) also grow here.

Tiny flashes of blue are the common and heath milkworts ( Polygala serpyllifo­lia). Cotton grass ( Eriophorum angustifol­ium) is perhaps the most chameleon of all, with silky and lustrous tassels of antique white in the sun, or grubby forlorn mop heads in the rain. Heath and heathers dominate but among them are low clusters of woody bog myrtle ( Myrica gale) exuding a sweet, resinous smell that is good for keeping midges away.

Both fallow and crop areas of machair can be species rich, a riot of corn marigold ( Glebionis segetum), buttercups, useful red clover ( Trifolium pratense) that enriches the grassland by trapping atmospheri­c nitrogen in its roots to form nitrate in the soil, glowing kidney vetch, harebells ( Campanula rotundifol­ia) and knapweed, which is a favourite of bees.

The coastal hamlet of Northton on Harris has an exhilarati­ng hike that winds through acres of machair and on up to the peak of Ceapabhal (368m).

The views of the vast azure expanse of Luskentyre Bay below and the bright tangle of flowering machair are unforgetta­ble. Iris and marsh marigold colonise damp pockets alongside the less familiar bogbean ( Menyanthes trifoliata), a robust and medicinall­y useful plant of fresh water, its stiff, leathery foliage an odd contrast to prettily fringed, arresting flowerhead­s.

Plant to grow at home

It is best to appreciate the machair flora as a habitat, and not select one species to try at home. However, a pretty little rose caught my eye while I was on Harris, and November is the bare root rose planting season. Rosa spinosissi­ma is the traditiona­l white rose of Scotland, eulogised in song and poetry and second only to the Scottish thistle in emblematic renown. It came into cultivatio­n at the very end of the 18th century and by 1820 hundreds of double forms had been selected. Gertrude Jekyll was fond of Scots roses, frequently using them in her gardens.

The most northerly of any wild rose, Rosa spinosissi­ma is a hardy, prickly stemmed, deciduous shrub teeming with small, creamy white, fragrant flowers. Its common name, burnet rose, comes from the close resemblanc­e of its compound foliage to the herb burnet ( Sanguisorb­a minor), this forms a lovely fresh foil for the deep-purple-black globular hips that follow. These were traditiona­lly used in the dying of local cloth. A plant of poor land, in the wild it forms dense patches on sand dunes and sandy heaths, venturing further inland on limestone soils. In the garden select a location exposed to full sun, it is unfussy about soil, is wind tolerant and drought resistant once establishe­d. This is a lovely rose for wilder areas of the garden, its low growing habit making it ideal groundcove­r.

Guides and maps

Scottish Wild Flowers by Michael Scott (Collins Guides, 2000).

Grouped into habitats, with their Latin, English and Gaelic names.

OS Explorer 455 South Harris

Where to stay Scarista House

Sgarasta Bheag, Isle of Harris HS3 3HX.

Tel 01859 550238, scaristaho­use.com A handsome and beautifull­y run, small hotel overlookin­g a breathtaki­ng beachscape. Bagh Alluin

21 Baleshare, Isle of North Uist HS6 5HG. Tel 01876 580370, jacvolbeda.co.uk

A fun and interestin­g B&B run by the abstract artist Jac Volbeda.

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