The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Beechgrove Garden marks 40th anniversar­y with special show

Scone Palace-based presenter Brian Cunningham, of St Andrews, tells Michael Alexander how the down-to-earth nature of the programme is at the root of its enduring success

- malexander@thecourier.co.uk

Beechgrove Garden presenter Brian Cunningham, vividly remembers when the seed of horticultu­re was first planted in his mind. His mum was a cleaner at St Andrews Bowling Club and, as a nine-year-old, he would spend his summers helping the greenkeepe­r lay out the lawn.

In his teens, the former Langlands Primary and Madras College pupil also used gardening as a form of exam time “stress relief” at home.

On leaving school in fifth year he secured a gardening apprentice­ship at Craigtoun Park.

Brian had seven “phenomenal” years there before five years at the Royal Botanic Garden in Edinburgh, three years at St Andrews Botanic Garden and four years at Rossie Estate, Auchtermuc­hty.

He was appointed head gardener at Scone Palace in 2012.

“Never in a million years” did Brian, 43, imagine he would become a presenter on one of his favourite TV shows – the Beechgrove Garden – but that’s just what happened in 2015.

After Scone Palace hosted a chilli festival and Beechgrove’s Carole Baxter challenged him to a chilli eating contest, he became a guest presenter – initially spotlighti­ng community gardening projects.

Now, as the Beechgrove Garden celebrates its 40th anniversar­y this weekend with a one-hour special programme that takes viewers down the path of Beechgrove’s growth, Brian says it’s little wonder the programme is a perennial of Scottish life.

“The good thing about the Beechgrove Garden – especially for someone like me because I’m still learning on the job – is that, like its viewers, I can also learn from the programme,” he says.

“And because it’s set north of the border its more relevant to our climate. I’m not having a go at Gardeners’ World or anything but a lot of the comments I get say the Beechgrove is more down to earth.

“Sometimes when I watch the relationsh­ip between Jim (McColl) and George (Anderson)

I feel like an apprentice again.”

Brian remembers feeling “nervous as anything” when he first turned up for Beechgrove filming – not quite able to believe he was in the company of Scotland’s gardening “greats”.

But sitting in the show’s garden bothy, he was very quickly made to feel so welcome.

It’s the “down to earth” nature of the show that he believes is at the root of its ongoing success.

“Take Jim,” he says. “Jim is like your pal. It’s like he’s your next door neighbour and you are looking over the fence and he’s saying ‘you’re needing to do something with those tomatoes’.

“That’s the way I see it. Again, the relationsh­ip between Jim and Carole: they have been doing it for years. The show just seems right. It’s a good mix. You get to see other gardens in Scotland – but not just the big showcase gardens like Scone. You are actually going into someone’s back garden.

“They are an amazing bunch to work with. I’m having the time of my life. Great fun.”

Sunday’s programme returns to Beechgrove’s humble beginnings behind BBC Aberdeen, when the garden was a small, difficult to manage patch of land.

It discovers how the earthy knowledge and banter of Beechgrove’s first presenters, Jim McColl and George Barron, helped take the show to unpreceden­ted success.

Jim and George’s use of their own dialects particular­ly endeared them to a huge Scottish audience, attracting one million viewers in those early days. It also looks at how Carole Baxter broke ground, becoming the first woman to copresent a TV gardening show in the UK, as well as revisiting the antics and expert makeovers of the Hit Squad.

Introduced and narrated by Scottish actress Elaine C Smith, who also visits and meets today’s presenters, the show also features embarrassi­ng auditions tapes and stories of presenters past and present – all mixed with a good dose of Beechgrove’s gentle, good natured humour.

Brian adds: “For me coming on to the television, I know I’ve got a bit of a Fifer accent.

“But listening to the way Jim talks, there’s no doubt I now feel confident to use the words tatties or dreich, that sort of thing. Jim’s given us an identity and we should be proud of it.”

Fellow Beechgrove presenters speak highly of Brian, too.

George Anderson says: “He has just got such a gentle way of telling people about things, about explaining about things. He’s such an expert.”

Carole Baxter says: “Well, I look up to Brian because he’s quite tall, isn’t he?”

The Beechgrove Garden Story is on BBC One from 5.35pm to 6.35pm tomorrow.

Jim is like your pal. It’s like he’s your next door neighbour

 ??  ?? Clockwise from left: Brian Cunningham; Jim McColl, George Anderson and Carole Baxter celebrate the milestone; George and Carole at work in the garden.
Clockwise from left: Brian Cunningham; Jim McColl, George Anderson and Carole Baxter celebrate the milestone; George and Carole at work in the garden.
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