Lesley Cooke is not a gardener whose love of plants
was sparked by familial interest. "My mother's gardening was
mostly confined to pots," recalls Cooke. And although her
father's family, the Grahams, had a long attachment to the soil --
they had farmed in Alabama since the 18th century -- ornamental gardening
was not their priority.
Cooke's travels through Europe as a
child are what inspired her and left a deep impression. Living in
Williamsburg, Virginia, and exploring the grand formal plantings of Europe,
she developed a love of garden design at a young age.
It wasn't until years later that Cooke put this
passion into practice. In 1990, she moved to England with husband Chris;
sons Graham, now 24, and Nicholas, 21; and daughter Caroline, 13. After
visiting and reading about gardens for years, she enrolled in a one-year
diploma course at The English Gardening School in London in 1999.
"That course was tougher than my degree," she laughs.
All the
hard work honed Cooke's love for English garden style and taught her
the importance of genius loci. "Any good design must address the
landscaped area as well as respond to the existing architecture, and for
me, symmetry is the driver," she says. Preferring winter to summer
and a green garden to a flower garden, she mastered a pared-down
style that suited her first major English project well.
While the family home is on a famous central London
garden square, for which she is the consulting designer, the Cookes wanted
a country getaway. Despite her husband's initial skepticism, they
bought Keeper's Cottage, an almost derelict Victorian cottage built
in 1863 without running water. Tucked away in a rural Gloucestershire
valley and formerly part of the Lypiatt Park estate, it is a secret,
magical place. There is not a neighbor to be seen, just towering wooded
hillsides, old stone walls, and, after Cooke undertook a major restoration,
a dreamy, fairy-tale cottage.
Creating the garden was not all smooth sailing.
"Although England has a wonderful climate for gardening, we are in a
frost pocket here. I look back over my garden diaries in amazement and
trepidation as every year is so different," says Cooke.
"It's a bit like The Wind in the Willows, with moles and water
voles. Deer eat my plants, and foxes and badgers abound."
The
one-acre triangular site is awkward. The cottage sits tight in the top
corner, and a stream, which used to feed vast Victorian fishponds below the
house, divides the property in two. Cooke began by designing the large
Yorkstone terrace -- the key outdoor living area -- and right outside the
kitchen/dining room sits a boxwood-edged herb knot garden with pots of tall
lilies for color.
Once the hardscape was planned, Cooke meticulously
studied the land. Wanting the best from each season, she included a winter
snowdrop display; swathes of naturalized daffodils and bulbs within the
meadow grass, through which she mows paths; and an exotic bog garden.
Edging the terrace are groups of black and white tulips, santolina,
lavender, and allium. It was important to make sense of the wedge shape, so
she plotted vistas through the rose-covered pergola to a four-sectioned
rectangular potager, where she grows vegetables punctuated by dark purple
dahlias. One's eye is led through a blurred boundary into the ancient
oak and beech forest rising beyond.
A drystone wall runs close behind the house, and
through it, the stream runs into the abandoned fishponds. "This area
is the most difficult of all. I recently planted 30 Himalayan birch trees,
which I hope will thrive in the damp," says Cooke. One of the most
charming aspects of the garden is the lumpy old walls. She has sensibly
left them alone to be colonized by indigenous alpine succulents.
The family spends weekends and holidays at
Keeper's Cottage. "It is a perfect retreat from London,"
says Cooke, "a great place to work, entertain family and friends, and
allow my Welsh terriers to run riot."
RESOURCES: Lesley Cooke, Lesley Cooke Garden Design, 011-44-207-589-3535, www.lesleycookedesign.co.uk.