Yorkshire Post

Celebratin­g the shotgun gardener

Centenary fuels interest in pioneering outdoorsma­n who brought plants fromChina and Nepal to Yorkshire

- DAVID BEHRENS COUNTY CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: david. behrens@ jpimedia. co. uk ■ Twitter: @ yorkshirep­ost

HE WAS a man out of his time, a “shotgun gardener” who scandalise­d his well- to- do family yet who left a lasting legacy on the landscape of the Dales.

Reginald Farrer is remembered as the father of the English rock garden, but any celebratio­n of his centenary this month will be as veiled as his life itself.

The walks and talks planned in the rockery that formed part of his family home, Ingleborou­gh

Hall, have been abandoned to the pandemic; a garden party in his honour postponed indefinite­ly.

“It’s very sad that it can’t now happen,” said his descendant, the botanic artist Annie Farrer.

Yet the anniversar­y has fuelled new interest in the life and career of one of Yorkshire’s most eccentric outdoorsme­n – a pioneering plant hunter who came back from China and Nepal with seeds that helped define the British garden of today.

Below the limestone fells in his home village of Clapham, he propagated Himalayan plants by loading his gun with their seeds and blasting them into the gorge where they still grow wild. He published books and richly illustrate­d them with impression­s of the species he discovered.

But, said Ms Farrer, he remained a tormented soul. A homosexual at a time when it was a trait that dared not speak its name, and with a debilitati­ng speech defect caused by the cleft palate he hid beneath his moustache, he had few known relationsh­ips.

“He lost himself in his plants,” said Ms Farrer.

“He didn’t want to conform. He didn’t like the stuffed shirts of his era. He was ahead of his time but a fish out of water.”

Yet it was not his private life that outraged his family on the Ingleborou­gh Estate, nor his diet of whisky and chocolate, but his conversion to Buddhism, which he flaunted in elaborate robes.

“In those days in the village, even tenants would have been expected to go to church on Sundays, and Reginald was not in that mould,” said his descendant Philip Farrer, who with his wife, Maria, runs the estate today.

“He was clearly a man of principles. And it must have been very difficult in that era to be different.”

Mrs Farrer, who had organised many of the events planned for his centenary, said: “His Buddhism made his family fear for his eternal life. They probably didn’t know about other aspects of his life. “But he had a naughty streak in him. He liked to shock – he enjoyed giving people a wake- up call.

“If he had been born in our time, he would have been the most extraordin­arily marvellous person. I can’t look at the landscape without thinking of him and his expertise in growing exotic plants in the most inhospitab­le habitat.”

Annie Farrer, who followed in Reginald’s footsteps and forged a career that took her to Kew Gardens, said there had been method in his apparent madness at shooting seeds into a rock face.

“He wouldn’t just have fired indiscrimi­nately – he was mimicking the natural process of seeds carried on the wind,” she said. “His legacy was to revolution­ise people’s ideas about what a rock garden was. It wasn’t just a mound of earth with rocks stuck in it.”

He lost himself in his plants. He didn’t want to conform. Botanic artist Annie Farrer, on her ancestor Reginald Farrer.

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 ?? MAIN PICTURE: JAMES HARDISTY ?? PIONEER: From left, Philip and Maria Farrer who run the Ingleborou­gh estate which Reginald Farrer transforme­d with plants brought back from the far east; this years marks the centenary of Reginald’s death.
MAIN PICTURE: JAMES HARDISTY PIONEER: From left, Philip and Maria Farrer who run the Ingleborou­gh estate which Reginald Farrer transforme­d with plants brought back from the far east; this years marks the centenary of Reginald’s death.

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