I have always loved growing plants, but can honestly say that this is the first year in my life that I’m really appreciating just how joyful an activity gardening can be. This is probably because gardening, for me, has often been as much a matter of frustration and loss as it has joy. In Edinburgh in the 00s, Tom and I spent many impatient years on the allotment waiting list, then, when we finally acquired a plot, I had my stroke and we immediately had to give it up. I lost many things after my stroke, and my lovely allotment, with its tiny greenhouse and inherited grapevine, was definitely among the most upsetting of those losses.
Our Carbeth house came with a huge lawn, in the middle of which we put some raised beds. There I was able to grow vegetables and sweet peas, and I successfully brought on flowers (like lupins) from seed, but I was often frustrated by the conditions (the garden was high, exposed, and composed of heavy clay) and I was held back by my own post-stroke limitations (such as my inability to use a spade or lawnmower). Sometimes, I found gardening very tiring; at other times, it became oppressive, a source of frustration and often sadness, as I found myself coming up against things I could not do – or in some cases felt I could not do.

That feeling of inability is key, as in retrospect, I do think that my perception of my limitations, as much as the actual limitations themselves, might have held me back, for many years, from being a joyful gardener. Gardening necessarily involves a lot of kneeling and bending: activities that can be painful or hazardous for me, as my lack of balance and general wonkiness means that I’m continually falling over. (I’m always in danger of toppling, and becoming stuck like Kafka’s beetle). Looking back, I think that my concerns about destroying plants by falling on them, as well as (I am ashamed to say) the prospect of being seen and pitied as a disabled gardener by my always close-by neighbours, hampered my gardening ambitions somewhat. I didn’t want to squish the hard-won fruits of my labours, and nor did I want to be observed falling over, or assuming the often undignified positions neccessary to restore my balance.

Since moving here to the mill, several things have restored my confidence, and allowed me to find my feet, as it were, as a physically wonky but joyful gardener. The first (and definitely the most important) is that this garden is not only well-established, but was made by someone who knows an awful lot about plants and planting. The shrubs and perennials have been carefully chosen and positioned and I spent much of last spring and summer just watching what was here, and being amazed by the extraordinary beauty and diversity of the garden I’d inherited.

This spring, the garden is still throwing up surprises, such as a peony I hadn’t previously noticed, and these tall peachy foxgloves which, being biannual, did not put on a show last year.

I have gradually built my confidence by watching everything in my garden grow, trying to learn about the needs of different plants, beginning to figure out when to intervene when necessary, and just giving things a go. There are several different clematis here, for example, all flowering at different times, and hailing from different pruning groups. I took photos of each cultivar and kept notes about what they need.

I’d never pruned a clematis or a rose before, but between last autumn and this spring have done quite a bit of both.

This is “rhapsody in blue” – which is now blooming quite rhapsodically, with its lovely, light fragrance, in the area where I like to sit and knit.

In early spring, I cut it back quite hard, mulched it, and fed it, and it is now rewarding me with vigorous growth and abundant blowsy flowers.

Every small success like this rose, or my meconopsis, has helped to build my confidence, and I have to say that I’ve gained another confidence boost from Gardener’s World, which I began to watch again last year. I saw Sue Kent enthusiastically gardening with her feet, and enjoyed the coverage of the gardening practices of other disabled people, particularly one chap with MS, who was very open and straightforward about the resourcefulness he needed to develop and care for his beautiful garden. All over the country I saw disabled people enjoying their gardens. What was I so afraid of, really? What was the worst that could happen? Falling over? I am quite used to that. Squashing a plant or plants? This is hardly the end of the world. Finding some gardening activities physically painful and / or frustrating? I must just get over myself, and, when necessary, ask for help.
By emphasising what I can do, and asking for assistance when I can’t I’ve managed to accomplish a fair bit in the past few months.

Pots, for example, are brilliant for me, because they are easy to get at, work in, and maintain

Pots also do not (usually) present a trip hazard (included in that “usually” are a few ridiculous falls and bruises). I do need some help with the really heavy pot work – last week, for example, I had to ask Tom to move and up-end all of the huge lasagnes so that I could remove this year’s bulbs for experimental replanting in the autumn – but I managed all the tulip excavation, compost rejuvenation, and general pot-sorting-out myself.

I’ve been genuinely uplifted by what I’ve been able to achieve with the pot-grown tulips, and surprised myself with the ground-planted bulbs as well.

Last autumn, I got Tom to lift some huge lilies (which I sadly cannot tolerate due to their migrainous associations) and filled the space with loads of allium bulbs. I didn’t dig the bed over (because I can’t) but did manage to put in the bulbs and lay down loads of organic mulch, with a thick top layer of bark, the idea being that this would improve the soil and help suppress and / or identify weeds (especially, I hoped, the bindweed, to which this area of the garden is unfortunately prone).

This spring, my new allium bed has flourished wonderfully, with gigantic cultivars with names like “Gladiator” and “Everest” shooting up at the back . . .

. . . and smaller varieties like “Lucky Balloons” towards the front.

I confess the name of this cultivar might have played a part my purchasing its bulbs, but I find these cheery-pink pom-poms, bobbing about on their multiple stems completely delightful!

My mulching work did indeed help with the bindweed (whose vigorous, pesky shoots I can now spot easily every morning, and pull out) but the bark layer also seemed to be enjoyed by the slugs who found it a lovely damp place to hide and have slug fun-times in early spring. Gardening swings and roundabouts.

Another thing that is really helping me to find joy in the garden is being tolerant of self-seeders. I am doing my best with weeding, and am (mostly) managing to keep thereally invasive stuff at bay (vigorous brambles, mare’s tail etc), but as some of the borders are very deep, and as it’s difficult (or impossible) for me to reach or step into the back, in some places there’s a limited amount that I can do. In these places, I’ve tried to put in easy-to-manage ground cover, like sweet woodruff, and have also allowed wild self-seeders, like red campion, cow parsley, ox-eye daisies and bluebells, (which all flourish in adjoining hedgerows) to just go ahead and do their thing here, if they want to.

Theres lots of aquilegia in this garden: gorgeous cultivated hybrids, like this:

and wild varieties like this.

Aquilegia are promiscuous self-seeders, and I’ve just let them go for it at the front of the borders, where loads have sprung up this year. Other self seeders are also flourishing, like the candelabra primroses . . .

. . . and the red valerian (which I’ve allowed to escape from a bed into the front gravel, where it is spreading itself about quite freely)

The final – and absolutely crucial – thing about becoming a joyful gardener has been not just accepting my limitations, but finding ways to adapt myself to them. I can’t dig, but I can mulch. Similarly, I can’t operate a strimmer, but I can (gradually) try to get rid of the need to use one. At the moment, my neighbours John and Donald cut the grass for me, but my intention is to adapt the garden to my abilities by completely getting rid of the (for me) totally unmanageable lawn. Over time (and it will have to be over time) I intend to eat away at the lawn, lifting blocks of turf, laying down mulch and paths, and gradually expanding the range and extent of what I plant each autumn. It will be fun.

I’ve found joy in this garden then, first because, it was already here, just waiting for me to learn about it and look after it, in my own way; second, because I’ve let go of my fears about it, tolerating the prospect of plant damage (likely) personal injury (possible) and indignity (routine), and finally because I’ve been able to accept my own limitations and adapt, planting up easy to manage pots, laying down thick mulches rather than digging over, doing what weeding I can while allowing self seeders to spread themselves about, and asking for help when necessary, especially from Tom, who is always there to help me to my feet if I fall over, dig out a massive phyllostachys nigra, or cut back and tie in this huge, rather, unruly climbing rose.

The garden has been such a restorative space for me this spring, and has been particularly helpful during a time when I’ve been unable to take long walks (or, actually, any walks), and when I am trying to face, with equanimity, the increasingly likely prospect of post-stroke physical decline. Here I’ve found huge rewards just from being patient, paying attention, and giving things a go. All things I might usefully bear in mind, whatever my physical future brings.
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Thank you for this lovely post. I have a garden, which i started from scratch 29 years ago. It is my refuge in the summer and was very valuable during the covid confinment. The last couple of years, i had to adapt and ask for help. It has been frustrating and, although not as restrictive as yours, i understand a little of what you go through. It is not easy to ask for help or to restrain when you would work more or do things differently to achieve what you want but i realise that it is still enjoyable and your post made me realise that we are lucky to have this oasis even if we have to adapt. I also want to thank Tom for his beautiful pictures. It makes your garden alive and almost like i am there
Perhaps you will enjoy Modern Nature bij Derek Jarman. His journals about his garden around Prospect Cottage in the South East of England are fascinating. A windswept gravel plot turning into a garden.
Kate, thanks so much for all your garden posts! I have shared many of them with friends. With this post, you have reminded me to enjoy my time in my garden, even with my aging body. I am very grateful.
How beautiful Kate!
The two things I’ve found most helpful in learning to garden and grow vegetables, after finally getting an allotment, are
1. Charles Dowding’s “No Dig” method https://www.charlesdowding.co.uk/
2. Scotland’s very own “Beechgrove Garden” https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0004c4v
I saw something like Lucky Balloons in a garden yesterday, as I was walking home from errands! It made me laugh to see a pom-pom plant! I also find Gardener’s World inspiring. As someone with no garden (barely windowsills). I focus on appreciating others’ beautiful plants. Thank you for sharing your garden, Kate!
I have arthritic knees and have had 5 knee surgeries between the two of them; getting up and down off the ground is the hardest part of gardening for me. Ihave a small plastic step stool that i sit upon when I am weeding the gardens (I have three on my small city lot). I can center the legs so the plants don’t get squashed, and although its just 12″ tall, its is much easier to get up from that level, plus I have the seat of the stool to push off from. Gracefully? no, but I’m past caring about that. ‘m looking forward to many posts about your beautiful garden,
I’m so happy that you are gardening. I have gardened for years. I think a lot of knitters are gardeners. Nature has the way of helping us thru those moments of limitations. I’ve had a rough six months of health. Tests, blood work, more tests. Finally found an arterial clogged artery. I’m now one month post op. I have a stent in my artery and slowly getting my life back. I use my feet a lot for my gardening. I grow roses that are incredible and let me know what they need. My limitations are doable and I hope you find that too Kate.
my best,
mary Dean
Oregon
I’m so happy to hear you are enjoying and learning all sorts of things about gardening, adapting and plants! I’m experimenting with vegetables in pots this year as I had shoulder rotator cuff surgery early May so am wearing a sling to immobilized the left arm. It is working! Partly because it removed the hungry roly poly bugs from young sprouts. You might enjoy the garden section in NYTimes by Margaret Roach. On her podcast she just spoke with the author of “Bad Naturalist” and her recognition of what gardening efforts to prioritize and what she cannot control, plus the new to me concept of succession when naturalizing .
I’ll take a look at Margaret Roach, thank you Heather! Hurrah for your veggies, and I hope your shoulder improves
Thank you! A timely reminder of patience and taking joy in doing what you can. I have appreciated reading this after a difficult week. The photos are beautiful. 😊💐🌹🌸🌺🌷🌻💮🧶
Thank you so much for the beautiful photos and words about the garden. I have been looking forward to seeing your “new to you” garden each time you post. I live in the desert, in an apartment with a balcony and would love to have rose bushes, but have to enjoy the neighbor’s. I also am unsteady on my feet so have several colorful pots filled with flowers so I can “garden” them. My cactus is enjoying her spot on my balcony. I go out every morning to water and whisper to the pots of greenery, it is my peace. Again thanks for sharing your corner of the peaceful kingdom.
Sue in Albuquerque, NM
is there anything nicer than talking to ones plants first thing in the morning?
Your garden looks amazing Kate. & hearing about how you are enjoying your gardening is another joy.
Also hearing about your 3 perennial weeds makes me more sanguine about my single one – Lesser Bindweed. I gather you need to excavate down to almost coal seam level to deal with horsetail. & even then . . .
>
yes – I am resigned to those two particularly invasive weeds – coal seam? Ye gods!
What a joyful post!
I’m enjoying having a proper garden of my own for the first time, not too big but I have an existing wisteria that’s flowered exuberantly, a fruiting cherry tree, some roses that will be hard-pruned or replaced depending on how they flower, and space for lots of herbs.
Wonderful! How lovely to have that glorious wisteria!
A great read, and insightful to read about your gardening adaptations, all seem beneficial for the good of the garden.
Hello from another wonky gardener!
I find using walking sticks with loops, so I can hang them over my wrist, are very useful. Just knowing they’re there seems to help my balance.
Another useful aid is a small low trolley/dolly. I can lift heavy pots but I can’t move when I’ve picked them up (i.e. not much use at all!), so I plonk them on to my little trolley then pull it to where I want to place the pot. No need to call for help!
Your garden looks amazing – it must have been a lot of work.
I thought of you today when reading Robin Lane Fox’s column in the FT. He mentions that at Chelsea this year they had a meconopsis simikotensis from north-west Nepal which ‘was just opening a cluster of bluish flowers on curving stems, after which the parent plant will die’. Evidently it is the first time it has been seen at Chelsea, something Lane Fox writes is ‘a testimony to good fortune and skill’. It was part of a wider display by the Meconopsis Group.
Ooh! I must have a read!
A joyful post full of positivity and colour, the photos are so beautiful. Gardening can be hard work whether you have a disability or not, you are finding such happiness that it can only be good for you. Your tulip posts were inspirational -as a result I’m planning a spring tulip fest all of my own in my pots. Nothing much grows in my garden, poor soil, too many trees which we have no control over, you’ve shown me what can be done!
What a wonderful garden – and how lucky you are not to have deer munching away at your glorious plants! My challenge is to find plants they DON’T enjoy eating.
Happy Spring!
Christine
Hi Kate. So glad you can feel the joy! I am sure your creativity will add to your garden’s beauty. PS Don’t give the self-seeders too free a rein. They will ride roughshod :(
Dear Kate. I am here in California and have become a devoted reader of the e mails you are kind enough to write. I “met” you when I joined in on the summer of mystery. Your writing is sublime and the way you live your life is so open and gracious. I wish I were your neighbor. When I read your e mails I feel that I am! What a multi talented person you are….I admire you! Jan Richmond Whichard
Dear Kate,
I know very well the feeling not to be able to work in the garden like I would like to! But we both have a garden and can sit there in times where working is not possible. Try to enjoy it and I think you are able to! I would very much appreciate to see a photo of a border in total…best wishes Susanne PS: I had a very good contact with Maylin who helped me a lot!
Hurrah for you and your garden, Kate. As a lifelong gardener myself, it is wonderful to see and hear how you have embraced your new space and even adapted to the limitations you face in caring for it. Lovely photos, too!
Had I planted such a wonderful garden, I would be so pleased to know that you were delighting in caring for it! I learned to garden watching Gardener’s World, and I now have a plot at a community garden where I happily grow flowers and veg – it is such a source of constant wonder!
That was a very joyful post! Hurrah for you understanding yourself and your surroundings. The next to last picture looked like a very bad hair day and I laughed.
Cheers.
Kate,
Thank you for sharing your challenges and vulnerability. Perhaps not on the same scale, but I’ve noticed with my advancing age limitations that are extremely challenging to one that has always been active and gardened. Actually, I’m quite shocked at times what I can no longer do. But I’ve refused to give up my gardening. I’m quite certain I will have always have a garden even if I can only sit next to a pot and admire the shoots springing forth. And knit……
Rebecca
Thanks for this, Kate. I have pretty serious arthritis in some parts of my body that affect my ability to do many garden-related tasks without being inventive (and, more importantly, determined) about it. I’m also working in a semi-arid climate with clay soil–I definitely can’t dig very far in it. I have been eyeing, and need to obtain, something to sit on that makes it possible for me to access the ground reasonably well.
I have already replaced (with lots of help) my front lawn with prettier things that are more manageable: it’s a constant joy. I can’t say enough good things about getting rid of lawn! (The dogs have been doing their version of that in the back yard, and I’m leaving them to it. . . .)
Dear Kate,
Greetings from Toronto and many thanks for sharing your gardening journeys and joys. I loved reading this post, empathizing keenly with wanting to be a joyful gardener, while bumping into our own barriers in the midst of so much possibility.
If I may share my own experience, over the past years, I have been working through a pattern of depression/mourning seizing me as I tend and remodel my garden. Slowly I have found ways to settle before I go that ease the pattern. The pattern still runs sometimes and it helps me to hear your story of working with your own challenges.
As always, I adore yours and Tom’s photographs. I also enjoy wearing my Evendoon sweaters, with a Carbeth to come someday down the road.
With appreciation,
Julie
Your gardening expertise staggers me! I enjoy gardens very much but can’t have one where I live now, which is mostly a relief because I’m quite clueless at it. It’s encouraging just to be reminded that gardening isn’t magic, but something you learn about and develop skills at like anything else.
thank you! I love your flower photos. I should take your advice: get over myself and give it a go. I wobble often, don’t fall too often. But my family is always jumping in front of me to do stuff so I won’t damage myself. 🤣❤️🤣❤️
Amen and hurrah to this wonderful fragrant post, Kate. The dark red rose
is almost edible in its sensory overload…
And think of all the benefits you are offering to rural bumble bees, who
have families to feed…
I shall share this fine offering of wisdom with several of my ageing
garden-loving (and unabashed) friends. and especially with myself…
Like you, I’m curious as to how to re-interpret myself as an ageing
gardener (now in my crone-hood, much to my surprise)
After having hammered a big toe (on my digging foot) while moving logs @@@
Kathy
https://writingpresence.com
Gardening is a joy and its lovely that you have found ways to make it work for you and give you pleasure … as for that peachy foxglove, I need one of those in my garden immediately!! :)
Fabulous photos. I’m so glad you’re enjoying the garden. I definitely think it’s part of my creativity and part of my well-being. My garden has lots of deep purple alliums and pale pink and yellow aquilegia. The roses are beginning to come into bloom and I have some purple astrantia which is a star. All perfect companions for my knitting.
Happy Sunday!
Thanks for all that rich language and details about your gardening experience. Perennials are The Bomb! Have you ever tried using a kneeler?
Christine Widgren
I have a squishy kneeler, which is very useful!
Bravo! You inspire me, inspire us all. We SHALL age gracefully, sort of… and with beauty and peace in the garden!