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The good garden blog is about sharing garden inspiration and ideas from historic gardens around the world and some right next door.  Garden stories explore garden history, design, and the garden people behind famous and not-so-famous gardens.  My garden photographs span dozens of places across 5 continents.  Please join me in celebrating good garden design.

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The romantic garden

David February 10, 2018

Do you have a favorite romantic garden?  For many people, the answer to that question is the Garden of Ninfa. (Definitely, one of my favorite.)  This got me wondering, what is a romantic garden?  “Scenic vistas, winding paths, bucolic meadows, and rustic retreats suitable for solitary contemplation are just a few of the alluring naturalistic features...

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In Picturesque Tags Ninfa, Italy, Roses, plant ideas, Garden ruins, Roman ruins
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Anderson Japanese Gardens
Anderson Japanese Gardens
Giardini di Ninfa
Giardini di Ninfa
Sissinghurst Castle
Sissinghurst Castle
Boboli Gardens
Boboli Gardens
Dumbarton Oaks
Dumbarton Oaks
Anderson Japanese Gardens Giardini di Ninfa Sissinghurst Castle Boboli Gardens Dumbarton Oaks

Invitation to a garden

David January 15, 2016

There is nothing like a good garden gate to welcome us into an outdoor space. Garden gates tell us where to enter the landscape – mark the separation between the outer and inner worlds of the garden - and provide a sort of invitation.  Here are a few of my favorite.  What's your favorite garden gate?

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In Arts and crafts, Italian renaissance, Gardenesque, Japanese, Picturesque Tags Ninfa, Sissinghurst, Boboli Gardens, Dumbarton Oaks, Latina, Italy, Kent, United Kingdom, UK, Florence, invitation, Anderson Japanese Gardens
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Happy Valentine's Day from Ninfa

David February 14, 2015

The garden of Ninfa is often refered to as “the most romantic garden in the world.”  It doesn’t hurt that garden expert Charles Quest-Ritson wrote a book about this garden using this phrase as its title. Is it a claim, a boast, or just a provocative statement meant to peak our interest?

I was curious to see this for myself.  With so many romantic gardens, how could any one claim to be the most romantic?  Depending on your mood, ”romantic” could take on many styles.  As I planned my day trip to Ninfa, near the medieval town of Sermoneta, south of Rome, I was skeptical -- to say the least.  Would I be impressed or disappointed?  To heighten my anticipation, the garden is hard to get to, is only open a few times per month, and only a few hours in the morning and afternoon.  Tickets can not be purchased in advance.  Instead they require waiting in line for at least an hour, and then, you can only visit in chaperoned groups.  I have never visited a public garden with so many restrictions.

Like other picturesque gardens, Ninfa feels like a series of perfectly composed landscape paintings.  A river, a lake, mountains in the distance, and ruins are key elements.  What makes Ninfa unique is that it incorporates the actual ruins of a Roman village.  If you recall, the picturesque movement got its inspiration from paintings of the Italian countryside, and here we have a picturesque garden that is actually in the Italian countryside.

Monty Don and Derry Moore’s Great Gardens of Italy explains its history:  “For a thousand years Ninfa was a busy town on the main road from Rome to Naples until 1381 when it was sacked by mercenaries and the remaining inhabitants, much reduced by plague and … malaria from the surrounding marshes, abandoned it.”

Fast forward to the 1920’s when the Caetani family began to shore up the ruins and to plant again. They planted cypress, pines, oaks, and cedars.  But most of all, they planted roses. The rose links the garden spaces together.  Roses of all varieties are everywhere.  Marguerite Caetani, a literary magazine editor and wealthy American, is credited with how the garden looks today, herself planting hundreds of roses. 

This garden is a dream place.  To enter this garden is to enter a bubble in time and space.  A garden well worth the hassle of getting there and waiting in line for tickets; it deserves all the praise it gets.

Happy Valentine's Day.

 
 
Marguerite Caetani.  Source: Made in South Italy Today 

Marguerite Caetani.  Source: Made in South Italy Today 

In Picturesque Tags Ninfa, Italy, Roses, plant ideas, Garden ruins, Roman ruins
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