The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - The Telegraph Magazine

Wild at heart

A 12th-century monastery is an unusual place to find a serviceman-turned-horticultu­rist, but Joshua Sparkes is bringing his own modern, ecological approach to a traditiona­l English country garden.

- By Alex Preston.

An ex-serviceman transforms an English country garden

AT JUST 29, Joshua Sparkes, head gardener at Forde Abbey on the Devon/ Somerset border, is one of a wave of young horticultu­rists mixing innovative techniques with traditiona­l methods. But Sparkes didn’t always see himself spending his life in the potting shed. He had a fairly feral childhood in the Kent countrysid­e. ‘I had a best friend called Blaze, who was a wild child as well,’ he tells me. ‘We used to play in the woods, go on the lake, wild swim. Every time I went to school, I was a bit depressed.’

At 17 he joined the RAF, where he served as an aircraftma­n. ‘I was still a kid, really,’ he says. ‘I loved travelling. I went all around the world, but it was during my last tour, in Afghanista­n, that I began to recognise the allure of the landscape. There are wonderful mead

ows, grasslands, trees there – it’s not just hemp and opium fields. It’s a beautiful, varied landscape, snow-capped mountains going down into greenpastu­red hills and desert.’

During his time in the military, Sparkes was one of many in the forces called on to plant up the wildflower meadows around the Olympic Park in Stratford, east London. It was only when he saw the Afghan pastures, though, that he realised his true vocation. ‘It gave me a jolt. You join the military and you forget who you were, because you’re so busy forging this new, military person. I remembered my roots. It felt like a calling.’

He handed in his papers and studied horticultu­re at Plumpton and Hadlow colleges. He then got a job with the National Trust at Sissinghur­st Castle in Kent, where head gardener Troy Scott Smith soon saw his potential. He was given charge of the estate’s wildflower meadows, which became one of the property’s most popular attracme. tions. Sparkes was chosen for the prestigiou­s Triad Fellowship that sends the country’s best young gardeners around the world to study different horticultu­ral practices. He followed this up by winning a Winston Churchill Fellowship to research different approaches to composting and soil cultivatio­n in Europe and Asia.

Now, though, Sparkes has settled at Forde Abbey, the 12th-century Cistercian monastery, where he works in partnershi­p with the current owner of the house, Alice Kennard. She and her husband Julian live in one wing of the abbey, which is otherwise open to the public.

The 30-acre garden has always been managed with the environmen­t in mind, something evident in the meadow that Sparkes leads me through when I visit Forde on a blissful late-spring morning. ‘These are Cistercian meadows planted by the monks,’ he tells me, ‘and they really have been untouched for hundreds of years.’ There’s hay rattle, clover, knapweed, pignuts, all combining to form a dense carpet of flowers.

Forde stands close to the banks of the River Axe, and it’s a garden full of water. There are a series of ponds, in one of which rises the Centenary Fountain – the largest in the UK – that shoots a jet of spume 160ft into the air. There’s a bog garden teeming with gunnera and hostas, fed by a medieval culvert (an undergroun­d pipe), installed by the monks. But the real pleasure of Forde is the way that the beauty of the abbey – the long, honey-coloured house swagged in clematis and wisteria – is framed by the garden. ‘That’s one thing I learnt in Japan,’ Sparkes tells ‘The idea that you have a formal structure and layout into which all the wildness creeps back in. We only have three gardeners, so we actually can’t maintain it all, but rather than seeing that as a problem, we’re using it to create beauty. The cow parsley is making its way in, the buttercups are appearing in the borders.’

Sparkes has found a willing ally in Kennard, who has embraced his

‘I learnt in Japan that you have a formal structure and layout into which all the wildness creeps back in’

approach to horticultu­re, which is rooted in the soil. ‘The compost and the soil is the foundation you build the garden on,’ Sparkes tells me, as he leads me up to the composting area. There are a dozen bokashi bins, in which food waste is anaerobica­lly fermented, and a vast mound of goat manure – ‘Goats are fussy eaters, so it’s the best manure.’ Sparkes is a keen proponent of biochar – carbon-rich charcoal – and ‘compost tea’, a liquid fertiliser brewed from a variety of ingredient­s. Along with his compost, which he cures ‘like a fine ham’, he adds dock, comfrey and a fungal mixture made with rice, all steeped in water and molasses.

It’s hard not to buy into his theories, given the beauty of the results he has achieved. Despite the fact he has only been at Forde for a little over a year, the garden is already shaping itself to his character, with his signature plants – hesperis, woad, teasel and honesty – thronging the borders, each of them in dialogue with the soft wild beauty of the surroundin­g landscape. Forde Abbey is a very special place and is lucky enough to have found itself in the hands of an equally special head gardener. The gardens at Forde Abbey are open daily; admission £10 ( fordeabbey.co.uk)

 ?? Photograph­s by Rebecca Bernstein ?? Above Joshua Sparkes stands in a flowerbed among alliums, honesty and hesperis
Photograph­s by Rebecca Bernstein Above Joshua Sparkes stands in a flowerbed among alliums, honesty and hesperis
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 ??  ?? Clockwise from right The beds around Forde Abbey are in constant dialogue with the wildness of the landscape; the abbey is known for its wisteria, while the pots contain a constantly changing display of flowers; the abbey’s walled garden is a vibrant mix of vegetables and flowers; the wildflower meadows are a carpet of colour from April to October; the Centenary Fountain shoots a jet of water 160ft into the air from the pond
Clockwise from right The beds around Forde Abbey are in constant dialogue with the wildness of the landscape; the abbey is known for its wisteria, while the pots contain a constantly changing display of flowers; the abbey’s walled garden is a vibrant mix of vegetables and flowers; the wildflower meadows are a carpet of colour from April to October; the Centenary Fountain shoots a jet of water 160ft into the air from the pond
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